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PONOKA HERERAI 


BHUGENE 
VOLUMES I. 


BUSINESS MEN’S 


FOR MEET 


4 


INS 


CALL 


A meeting of the business met 
of Ponoka is yecatled at the 
Ponoka Her offee tomorrow 
night at So’elock to consider the 
question of ear losing. A full 

tend ested, Ry order 

I [ i 
D.C. P. »iYlee of Ponoka. 
MAILS GOING TH CLOSE AT THIS 
CPRPEICH As POLLOWS: 

Monitey and Prvday ° lf pom 
TT lity : peu 
All ‘ WING BOT cha 
Taesd i s., Su Ost a. mn 
Wea bev ancl it y O20 a, mn 
aon hours frou S a.m. to7 p.m. | 

I, B. ALGAR, P. M 
Pono thu 
IRESBY'T tLAN 
PL. tan ad 7 ' 
titi ved . i > 
' pub ' he 
poet We | en \ i 
willy iavited J. A. MA i 
NitenCUist CHURCH Oj 
Canada, Servi every Sunday 
was p.m. Sunday ' 1 at 10: 
au. 1 Prayer meet Wp. mt. or 
Friday evenings, The p ce cordin 
invited Pos, TP ty, | we 


ENGLAND, Se 


tand third Sut hiday'| 
Ue Dae | 


(ZHU RCHOF 
ices heli 
fiarebol et a 


(IOMAN 


| 


CATHOLIC. Ser 


vices in the school house at LOs30 
on the first Sunday in each month, 
Pers IPRSSTON AL. 


‘Ah sABERT KE. SAGE 


UNDERTAKER, 
tock of Coffins and Caskets, 
ALBERTA | 
| 


Fuil 
PONOKA 
4 f)RINNAN & MEMBERY, 


PHYSIGIAN ; & SURGEONs. 
Otticeover Mc WKinuell’s Dray Store, 
. 
y PONOKA ALBERTA 
} OO 
‘ Fraternal, 


ne eae A a a es eee mee ene ae ee ene mer = 


(cr ~>ANADIAN ORDER of FOR 
i rs Meets ou the Second acd 
} Fourth Tuesdays © month at 
SS: po. ta, A cormtial iny ition t ‘ 
i Visiting member 
i WibLtAM M. Jone 
: EUGENE RIAN, Chief Rauger, 
, RSA FS. 
§ JOUN ©, RATILB 
ve a | * +f FY 
( Carpenter.. 


AND 


builder. 


oR OE. 


Will contract for Complete Building 
or work by day. 
EstTiMATés FURNISHED, 
Prices Rieu, 
Work GUARANTEED, 
Enquire of A, RED or address toe at 
Ponoka, A'berta 


en ere Rem eR ee GENE ee ae me 


Dentistr 
| ry 
DR. J. CHRISTIE, 
Licentiate f the Roy yal College 
Dental Sur S2ONS, I ront 
Will visit Ponoka every 
Friday and Saturday 
with a view to locating permanently, 
When desired 
Teeth Extracted without Pain. 
.COLE & LINTON 
House and Sign * 
Painters 
ay — 
: Decorators. 
: me & 
‘I Our prices ave reasonable and all ou 
3 ¢ work is guaranteed, Give us your or- 
Ms der to paint your building, 
¥ A, COLE or J, LINTON 
fuk PONOKA PAINTERS | 
i 


REIAN, Bditor and Propriotor. 


(2 ere eee 


\ PROGRESSIVE 


PONOKA, ALBERTA, FRIDAY, Jt 


LAY. 


eee 


‘ yh i HGS 
7 A B49 A YS CA yy 


oar een aw 


Ponoka Will Observe the National Holiday in 
a Delitting Manner, 
- >, > VM. ADEA. 


LOLOL OOOO OT Or Or OOOH OO OLO2O 1 OS OL OY 


3 Horse Racing. ; 
$1. PONY RACE, 144 hands and under; } mile; 3 heats; 3 
BS lat $ d 82. 2 
$ 2. FREE FORALL: § mile; 8 heats: Ist $8, 2 { z 
+ 3. COW BOY RAC t Lhe Ist $S id $4 ¢ 
3 4. INDIAN RACE Lhoats Ist id SI $ 


Oe 
2 


' . 
> ¢ th - ODL RACI turn, | « | $ 
3 z 
3 7. HORSE RACE; ! its: Ist $5, 2nd 82 z 
. | nt I i , ¢ 
$ I i | heats, 1 », 2nd $2 * 
$. 10. 8 {ULE RACE; 1 heat; Ist 85, 2nd $2 $ 
ee ly as | | 2nd $2, 
$ 12. BR INTEST: Ist 5, 2nd $2. . 
$ 13. RIDING WILD | ; $2. ¢ 


> 


OO 
oe 


- 


% > 
: BASE , Prize Vetaskiwin vs. Ponoka + 
Da a sritpenememenniaiagoa * 
> * 
3 At histic “vents. g 
; | FOO AST ( | et 3 
Fakeah ere) P| iho | 4 Zo & 
> Se Rea RA | 11 dol z 
$ HOY LD, J | u + 
‘ 12, 100 4 l25e & 
Bo ; | \ : 2 10 > 
: fe oe oN ) ldol. @ 
6 i. ia | J | | 


OO 


ae 


Oe 
eat 


- 


Oe 


th ports. 


ince he ila Mig ior the Benefit ot 


De | 
: i! Ri IN HE MA ) Pn on 4 
: | : 
$ 3 | L: | ; 
te 1 « 
z 
¢ 
Dee ee Set ee See ee Ee See Se Se ke Oe Se Oe ae ee ee ee ee o0osene 
f Way RR i 
C OR ONA i 101 ie 
TDM By R AW SADR | 
POSTPONED. ey 
) ‘| Ju 
& {r, C Oo, W 7 ~ 
Illness of the King Prevents the joa. 1 
Coronation, nd uN 
\ \’ 
ii. Hi 
Owi to ‘ 1 { | 
His Ma { | ‘ ape 
t } Win |] | | ' 
vas toh ! iv, | {i j 
h iin ih | Hi | , 
M ijesty has passed throu re : | 
operat hnatt l hi LB 
su Dn) thal this haitlol is 
lite pI ious. [Liu COOOCOPOOC COC OOH OSOCOOOOE® 
hoped that he may speedily reco °* Are You Gone to > 
Telegraphic orders from the Lieu 3 : aan ? 
tenant Governor to the eff t tha ? me iD? ? 
> > 
owing to the postponement of the ; If So ( ¢ 
) idune 2 1 not b 7 { o 
ut aN not be) 3 M, L. DEWAR, > 
bse L as publi holid $ ‘ 
throughout the ‘Terrijories 3 Contractor rite 
Wunted, ; Builder. 
; $ 
An assistant in the Dominion Land 9 ponoka i LBERTA oS 
office, Lady preferred, Must write a % ys 
wood hand, Apply to ; plang Me 2 m ? 
W. D, Prreatnn, $ 
SUL—ABCHL. | 999OCOOPE COV ERO OOOO OOOO OW 
- at®* ~ 


PAPER IN A PROGR 


INE 27 


KSSIVE TOWN, Subscription $1.00 per year 


NUMBER 43 


102 


pete ote of otoet ot ote ote iad a ete ote ote ote ote arbeolents 


ney 


aved!! 
fh 


By Buying Your .~ 


DRY GOODS, 
GROCESIES, 
BOOTS, SHOES, Etc. 
From Us. 


teotoclertoeleag 


“— He -§. abeclerteotecter 
bo r3< efectos oyeey 


eee 


+ oye eye eee oie ~~ “ oe “+ “+ oe + n 


~ ome mes 


(a teen 


We buy for Cash. We sell for Cash or 
Vroduce, which enables us to give you 
Goods at Cloce Prices. We have only 
one price and it is marked in Plain 
Figures 


FOLLOW THE GROWDS AND GET JHESE BARGAINS 


a 


COGS nn LT 


for Good Goods 


We are Headgarters 
at Lowest Prices. 


a HIGHEST PRICI PAID FOR BUTTER AND KG GS, 
2. 
. Aven corer emma meee ae wren —* 
> wad ich come 
na it to be 
‘ werty 1s 
I P X/ 
war] ta 
: -; 7 
Qt alr —& u a} lkera 
C. 
e PONOKA, ALBERTA diseased 
% Blower, 
° itheair 
i oad sinthe 
Mi ' eures 
MC Fey Me aera YT Slower 
BY pe epeapeege aye eye eye ae ‘ Oe teed beled beled bleed le bl “ que 


ae) 
ny 


obs obo ofo oe obs ofe obo ote ofr oforete obs ole ofe ofe WA 


“te 


ote ef. * 


x 5 
“t+ 


x 
ot. 


SPACKMAI 
FAMODLS... 


Suns 
Fur 


. obs ote abe «fe ete ete ofe 


$ 


a2 ale @ 5 @ 
a 


le CEP Oe ope oye oye ope oye ego eye oy + oy oye oye oye eye 


eS 


». 


shine 


of] aCe 


Nar “ee 


A 
ms 
-t- 


‘%. 


©} n 
6 Ma CCLARY, of | itooune , 
pe A for { ‘ t ( ( ' nal P 
| ] | 7 
A bey the il ur ‘ ‘ | 

ait re ne NRE ; ( 


' ote ote ' ' '- ote ote t 


W% ee che bjs ofa aha dhe she ope oje ope eps ope WN 
dd | G* O49 HG He he OGy oho ope ope of 


yd ope oho 


GEO. STARKEY’S 
Blacksmith 
Shop “ - 


is the Popular Place with all who want good 


work at low price. 
A SVECIALTY 


PLOW WORK 


its | | ] 1 et 
| i tg [FI BA 5 ti 

i \ 
EUGENE RIAN 

Vit i l { 

pul ‘ rent i 

1 { ye ' 

a ‘ | Trvets i 

it i rest “oO ted 

\ ipp ication 


> D3PIPIFIIIIT 3I37IIIDII2 


" Correspondence, 


= ESSSSESCEEE SESS IIIT3 


Aster 
\ meh | 
t! i is beet | 
i tinu 
i ‘ rowa of | 
i meofr aA, \ 
S ' | rof Mrs, Vold's | 
day Nil k { rhs were al 
‘ madd everybody pent oa 
| antaf rT 
M Mat | hi tebe 
| 1 ! ' ‘ ' . 
t baal 
I) " I nbday 
‘ I 
| \ | : 
i ood 
\ i 
! 
| 1 Kinar Ka t 
fr for Vaubso 


WANT COLUMN 


Cows tor 


| | 
() 
CM 
I 
i | 
t | WwW 
‘ ! ! ! 
thea 
E B.M 
| " 
Is 
' 0 
| 
i 
‘ \\V \ 
b« il 
1 " | 
, ti 
| byed | | 
rot ' 
| t 
( | ! 
’ \ 
Notice Db t 
\ 
' 
| | 
' 
{ 
| l tild 
im Su 4 
| Ist 
| j " 
W 
| 
l Wil 
\\ 
We br 
Pe \ J 


A Sante adas ¢ Peolante se aberGe abe sben Ga abe <br Ne nde aden’ Ne 
‘ aden ’ % 
Po 
3 e | 
y Y pn 
. "@ | 
LAND... eq 

Ss: LAND AND + 

, 


v ncesurermenewyvesneeamnnenEn w canemen “2 — obs 

¢ t ! i s before buy t 

7 \W ‘ i bol tana tw t Wi “S 

es ' it Tk’ ‘ \\ e farmers and % 

2 t dep i t livin We will show ste 

. " } our owt 8 4 

= + 

‘ It \ , ‘ +] 

S gunna a ene AER ANSTEY UEECREPERS : 

° Lae 

* Three miles sputheast of Ponoka, “ 

-- hee 

a 4 
Gayo ee : : . 

s, W.N, Shaift, a tl E. ft. Larsen 

P . 

é er , 

He) g* *ye “y* , yy) oy Or ogeep ey, oye wae * et 


POLO OO OTO OTOL EEO TOTO TOT OPO TOE OOO OO OOO 
© 4 " ge 
2 \ tT ite a TET ed 3 
ae O UriC riiDiic. a 3 
3 \ Tt Fe \ rN ol ‘ 1) vith 1 3 
3 i ical Stele Ss 
> a aE i ’ f ¢ 
iV $ 
b4 Confec ¢ 
° w 
3 Fruit, Cig $ 
3 Soft Crinks, 3 
¢ ‘ ; 
$ Flour, Potatoes ; 
> i tra ° 
Next rt ? 
> ¢ 
a y e 
D OO SA A ee ee Ae Oe ee Se ° 


POPOL OOO OO Oi OOO OOH OHO Ol OO ® 


o LO Ob OHO 
3 5 3 
4 rapa Fh | nego Raed o Y Ag ¥ 
3 FF a ) } q J HR 4 r 7 Cc a a a a | y 
3 lon ao\ ¥ gyFrI WDA a & GO} g. ist 3 
queens ¢ 
: 53 
$ ULL 81 K OF 3 
3 oe AAPA 1 . TT 2amAS ce $ 
2 ener LP an AVL Us anaise. 3 
> Ane aS 3 
° AT PONOKA PRIC<S ° >< 
> . -_ “ @ 
l ae 
$ Fairybank Pesiofi wieaelioe.® aie ¢ 
” 


FOLD O LOL OOH OOOO OOO OOOO lO OTOrerODOD & 


SI 
< 


»= 


Fine In 


de Work a 8 t 


POSS POSS £44666 4465646466 660008606 


CS BSSSOSSCOES O04 FOL 44 HOSES LAO © 


pevrerty 2 ‘ ‘Aa POROLALEHHEOK 09600806 © 


5 SF ‘ 


ov elgale se 
Mir, \ ; \\ ‘ 
. \" 
\I Vl th ! 

. NM ' 

Ag \ 

ue 1 ( il Ma 

. \ weler 
y i] I ty) 
NUT Yefte Oy, MM Meu 
WViclsillivra yY & I ier Bank 
Spackman... 
PLAN ! ce 
MAC li pa | 7 ; 
P 
Ww. il lardw 
ALLAN’S TIN SHOP | 8s 
NOW OPEN, 
| | V 
W 
{ |? ) 


R. K, Allan, b Stay f 


New House and 
Newly Furnished 


Rates: 


$1 and $2 perday. 


lofel lkeland 


SELLARS & McCUE, Props. 


Special Attention to 
Commercial Trade. 


Ponoka, Alta. 


The Baris stocked witha Fine Stock of Liquors and Cigars, 


1S2OeSeOeBeOeOeS262H632GcG2SeSeOrees 
O2OeOeSeSeOeOeOeOeSsOrGeOeGeGeGeOege 


Aud tih badd dadedid th ihledah ee htbedidacherchatrtrdedhdab dd Lh A ta dod to 


©9899990909009980000000008 00000000009000980900000000 


5; PIONEER 
3 Livery Feed and Sale Stable. 
: 


* 

5 sc 

a W. M. JONES, Prop. 
( ae, 

2 

@ Ifyou want tomake a drive get vou team at 

® 

o 


Jones’ Livery Stable. 


Siu thattention to care of I 


933309 


at Low Prices. 
O CLCOLUGCMOPRHCOTSASEONOHOS DEG T CCTESCOECCEC HE FECEESCEOCTSCE 


raying Promptly Don 


SADE DACEA C4EOAAEGLEA BHAEN ASASASA AAAEABEGAA A4E444A 


¢ A 
: Thi ; a, PE Ee eek ey Pe Hi» So, > 
: V e dhe C | ad & } u & pon, 4 
$ * 
: THE LEADING ; 
i Lumber Dealers. { 
> <i - ik » — Ch Rw 4 
$ r 
4 a) ’ 
$ KI 7 TOY T reo 
$ . IT NOLIN! FARM IMPLEMENTS , 
! MARVESTI AAOHINERY . 
r > 
, \ present the WAW AD UAL INSURANCE CO 4 
> 
PEASE SCFPVPFEVY FUR VFPOPFFOEV VEVEFTVVY PEEVE TY FYVEEY TVD 


° — ee es ae eer eee Rowe me 


SOTO OOOO OOOO OCR OO lOY 


© “oO Pe a ae > ”) 0 Do oe 3 

¢ Bi } use Newly Furnis + 

2 Kverythin trictly First. + 

: : 

a YAI HOTEL! : 

ads Lf ove 3 

h .RENDEAU, Piop. 3 

$ 1, LAVCI, Man 3 

+ The cuisine is ¢ t ‘ cing hote in Alberta oi 

2 sLattention to commiers ‘ Rites S11 82 prem de 3 

Zo. Ee Oe Se Oe Se ot Se oe Oe Se oe oe ee ee Se ee ee ee ee ee ee 
AP Se 
a7 SVESETE 323S3S3q 

“Ay “ W.E. TURNER & CO: SM. 
wy 

| ey 

IN Niatix, { mle t : rtm  Y) 
® Native and Coast Lumber. W 
Wy 

AQ H, », Ot DING} mY 
SY , . one v 
ahs 

4% Py . l ) ) 4 ) a’ 
AN W 

62° | ( | \ 

, 

Vee Big 
_ 44645 * 4 + x ” ae 

é ’ 
LAND! LAND ; 
gf A Ye : tigi hh \ e » e 
, 4 
: Tho t Acre ( Y 4 
3 . 
P] . 
4 + 
4 > om . e 
’ > i re. = { + N LJ 
. + 
3 Hor Sale on fasy Lerms of Payment é 
4 : t 
‘ , 
. ® a 
> W.N. TRIMBLE, Guide Yr. J, WEST, Local Agent. % 
‘ PONO Hs 
t 

’ rvs e7verv"? he Se “%¥ 9 ‘? + ‘v4 ih hd ¥yv¥ue* 


i 


DROEKPKROAOKROROKOKOROKOKE HOKE KOKORO K ODIO GOLER ? 
DODD 


BROS 


Harness 


and 


| addlery. 


Sativa ay 1 Wn 


Whips, Brushes, 
Lada) rry ymbs, Fly Sheets, 
Yelescopes and Traveling Bags. 
a REPAIRINGIS # T- AND GUARANTEED 


SKOKOKOKOLOLOCOXSHOHOHO | 
SE OESES AS FONDS FOXOEOFO® 


OEOEOEOE SEED FOHOE OE OTOH SESH OE OH OH OH OHOHOHOHOHO 


pa 


‘Ponoka 


422??? 


Spl noid growing weather, 
Come to Ponoka Jominion Day. 


IF. M. Lee and J. W 


transacted business in Calgary this 
week, 


rN AK 


active 


Friesen has given up an 
interest in the iianage 
of the Ponoka saw mill 


turn to Manitoba 


A] Davis and G 


from: eight miles east 


ment 
and willre- 
Ss L. 


of the villowe 


Loveless, 


were callers at our office Monday, 
They report crops loing excell nt 
ly their vicinity. 

Raymond Stretch the first of t 
weeol pecan te f baiied 
hay bh » hus sot Hiss baby, hich 

us badly laage by rain, 
SOVE lnvs per ton in Wetaskiwit 

Che cone lit hous 
On tire ¢ iv of Dominion Da 

iil bn Lowed by clanee, tine 
procet is to wo tow | th orts 
Poe Ferguson orch vee fu 


nish the music, 


No mail was carried on the C,& 
Ih, Tuesday and Wednesda \ 
Is We ‘ \ ashout at Cars t 
is yviven as the cause, We waive 
wil no rain in this section hat 

vild occasion any damage to the 


A good many from 1! village 
attended the dance in the Seatield 
school house Friday night, The 
erdict of them all is that a splen- 
did time was had The evening 

is delightful and a good crowd 

asin attendance 

WN. Trimble this week got out 
the flagstaff from which the nae 


tional colors will float on Dominion 


Day. Itis forty feet in) length 
ind will be hoisted on the hill 
east of railway street between 


and Stanley avenues. 


John Fairley, dr, he 


Smith 


dt his 


LS nove 


it goods into the Troon 
over the McGillivray feed stor 
whe they willin the future — re 
ich Jone’s druy transferred the 
voods from the depot to the rooms, 
vhich was almost a day 8 wo k 
TT. A, Lavoie l ted a limited 
we r of friends to a bachelo 
dinner at the Roval Sunes { 
writer was fortunate enou to b 
me of the party id can say fron 
experience that all present heartil 
enyoyve i the occasion, and exten 
to the host their kindliest titucl 


for his hospitality é 


A. Vold wa 


from Asker 


s on 
last Priday wn entichtere | us 
} ef +! ° ‘ 

Some whabl purcier of hit 8] t 
ter mentioned by us last week. As 
stated by us that part of the eas 
country tributary to Ponoka has 
rece {no local improvement aid 
except two hundred dollars 


district 
rized to 


fax money pal tin by thre 
which Mr. Vold was auth 
expend, 

Hy 


to state 


HiraLp 
bo 
buildis 
onfer 
befor 


Hertz desires th 
the party who 
certain of his tools at his 
while he was absent will ¢ 
favor by returning the s 
which is well 


nry 


rowe 


mie 
his name, known, 
made public 
of petty thieving have been brought 
to light and of the 
parties should be made an example 
of before vo farther, 


The resi lents of the DF 
clistrict 
re planning 


is 
Several other cases 


BOE erunity 


allowed to 


ist Side 


school and surrounding 
on a pleasant 


cordially 


country a 
and 


prenie on July 
invite the public to participate with 
them, So accustomed have the 


States peopl to lebrating 
the Fourth that it is hard to let the 


dav vo by without some observance 


come co 


of it. The picnie ground is on thi 
farm of Robt. Dick Bring your 
baskets 


Detlef Behrens, formerly — of 


South Dakota, arrived with his 
family from Washington Friday 
He pure hased « teneacre tract ol 
W.S. Fisher south of town, and 
has erected a temporary building 
in which they will reside during 
the erection of a subst intial resi 
lene This section is glad to 
welcome such families as Mr, Beh 
re ns’ ancl we hope he Wey hever 


egret having located here 


and 


> > 


O'Brien | 


% DIDD 933d 339323333393333333932339332233939392333233393399 


_ Mr. 


and Mrs. 


» Royal, visite 


Tt, A. 


District. 


The Weekly Round«Up of Items of Local and General 
interest to Our Readers, 


SESSSCEC EES GE ECE ES ECE SE CEC eeESce 


Lavoie, 


aaeaceel 


= 


Seeseeeeeeeceeece? 


ot 


i Lacombe Friday, 


Ih Roming was ia from his 


farm 
the 


Battle 


settle 


ut Buifalo lake the first of 
WOK, 

Thos. Phillips, of the 
Lake ranch, went to Lacombe 
Saturdays train, 

The pe yple of the Asker 
ment will celebrate the | 


by an appropriate program, 


The Heratp has made anothe 
v.di i its equi; ae iota 
i he mater Line yp 
re of thie townspeoy ic solicive 

Baptist church servie +s will be 
eldat the school house by Rev, 
vi tilasm. on Suucday, dune 
u.. and every two weeks thereafter, 
J. Simington, Jacob Beck a 
it ny. Cuas, Patchett and W. J 
vied ty Were inifinted into the 
mysteries of Fore y last Tue \ 
hight, 

Win. Simons and John Schalk 
were down from 48-2) Saturday, 
W ley al erect 
hou tind prey ing to move ler 

oul uth Dak 
Court No 15, C,O I 
“ ely G- ¢ it au hall tor 
love purposes in the near future 
The ‘ ‘ i 
some thirty 
Robert Hockley, popular 
agent for the Crown 4 ing Co 
was down from is imonto t 
the young men of the villa ou 
With Hew suniine lil 
This office has just ned out 
the bills for J. Wo ita i i 
on duly 8. The ti des som 
rool horses and « ind cons 
erable farm machinery, 

r. C. Stretch cane ‘ nm frou 
his farm in the Brooks triet on 
Saturday and took home for oltre 
Stretch a fine p i 
ceived Trout the ¢ 

i tmund Cher tenn tl 
number OF Tilhisecke \ this 
section of Alberta this week, Mr 
nl ie has been inst miata 

elting a number ot | hi lowa 
‘ i inh 

Iwo ¢ Ww op 
il low ) i 
eventing tits we i o 
il it I ‘ ai i e 
‘ biiee i \l ir ‘ til J it 

\ ) 
\ ‘| i \ ‘ 
wetter Ways of setting t hall 
‘ 

Wed. ALilne, | f Fl 
ma, Guat rut daa t i] 
ari in Ponoka this ' i 
Will ¢ isu il | 
hen in they Nish 
fie has pureh wud it tot aud 
contract to M, Li. De t 
s.ory luil ding, Mr. Muiln ia 
some fim specimens of 4 ‘ molto 
wraphic art and Vonoka is) fortun 
tite bi LaVilige dibith boeiak re, obi 
Wife will jon hin in a in 

Joseph il ewart and boy 
were down from his farni fourtes 
iniles northwest of the village rT) 
maturday, Mr. stewart pre nis a 
wood exmmple of what may rT 
complishe {in am Short this by i 
man who has the GUIs position r~adoO 
tittle hustling the enim wel 
from South Dakota early las 
spring, moved out to his | e und 
broke and cropped forty ae ol 
land This year he ha event 
acres bh crop 

What narrowly escaped being a 
fatal accident occured data illiag 
Saturday mornin Wiis un 
loading a car of immigrant good 
at the station George and Fred 
Hunt allowed their team to ot 
iway from them Thre of OC 
Steers’ little boys were playing 
near the station Two of them 
were run over by the running team 
and itis a wonder both were not 
instantly killed One of the litth 
fellows had one leg qu badly 
bruised but no bones broken, The 
other received a fracture of the lett 
arm and was somewhat bruised 
about the body Drs, Drinnan «A 
Memberry attended them and they 
are now vetting along nicely 


st of July 


A photographer and a jeweler 
have been added to the enterprises 
}of Ponoka this week. Both these 
were badly needed and we hope to 
BE ach pros] er, 


The neighbors of C. S. Wing. 


northwest, say he is the proudest 
manin Alberta just now, all be- 
cause of the arrival at his place of 


a L0-poud boy on last We 


MOrnitige. 


dnesday 


A new carpenter firt ° 


od 


in the village this we ; 
J. Simington and Chas, Patchett 
Phese two workmen will make a 
strong tenm and deserve a liberal 
share of the patronage in their line 

M. L. Dewar has rented Wesley 
Warnock’s homestead six miles 
east of town, and will soon move 
his family there, Mac, however, 
will be o i for all kinds of car 
penter Work, as shown by his ad in 
this sue, 


George Cox this week purchased 


e lots within the villuze of 


moka, as follows Lot 1, blo 


SX moO 


le . 4. block 4; lot 1), block 
Luk i. block 2 and block D, all 
of which were formerly owned by 
J. H. Smith. Givo idently 
is moti neg in bis faith of tl 
lx Villaye on the C & J 
i elor st 
me adal heb esse 
slo rhneeded No loge 
1d your watele vi bit 
them to Von il be Dor 
of tian til, h ine f ere 
ih |). ! t 
for occupaney t we it 
Creiehto: ite of Toro ilk be 
c ‘ 
Ther port cnine { 
mori { | 
t le Lin rurnawas ! il it 
© riy l pon til i 1 li t 
is lean a dru bore 
illowe feam to run into 
lougeh, « vning one of t Cay 
3 hel wh utliciently 
mn | in the a l to make fo 
mn | hy hin ‘ hin j ] 
hicl | fi t to 
1 
\ nat nil the ire ul tr 
ip f their he ill 
’ | it t | 
' ' ) n that Po 
| townsit tween 
| Ni Th 
i ey { during the 
1 inst pa WI ot} 1 
‘ treet from one t 
f pin mead, w ? 
P hard t 
| \ ! ilk 
( & “Zolhl nve th port 
ih \ it] now moved | | 
‘ ‘pt t t ‘ la 1 
Wolf ere the brides ‘ ] 
t feet o iter We 
MeClatlin oat Cook t 
‘ t n 1 ’ 
il escaped ris uvthe 
thie unexpected | \ 
Whe bus t 
recoverina t P nect 
have 1 po ' 


Dissolution. 


The partnership heretofore existing 
hetween D A.A, Drinnan and G, G, 
Meanberv, physicians and surgeons, 
inden the tien meee Drinnan & 
Memberv, Ponoka, is hereby declared 
to be dissolved by iutual msent 
fromioand after Jane So, [a2 

\. A, DRINNA 
Gi Mie ny 
Order of the Overseer, 

AV) prurtic who have not already 
cleaned their alley back vars 
it evi il yl ‘ we rerepule teal to do 
viiitnae WW, h, ¢ I 1 

McKINNELL’S 

a 1 P 
Barb Wire 
Cure % 

Is 
GUARANTEED. 
POR 
CUTS, ULCERS, Ete. 
Price oe, 


Mrs. W.J. Dea is up from 
nisfail to visit her parents. 

Mrs. J. M. Bird entertained a 
number of ladies Monday after- 


noon in honor of her Miss 
Emily Stewart, of Lincoln, Neb. 


Mrs. Ff. M ! Miss Lib- 


Tn- 


sister, 


Perry ane 


bie Perry, mother and. sister of 
the Perry Bros. here, arrived on 


Friday from Wellington county, 
Ont., to make their future home 
in the “Fairest Gardenof Alberta.” 


J. H. Dolton, who for the past 
your has resided on A. MeGillvray’s 
homestead, last week moved onto 
his homestead over east of the 
muskeg, and Grandma MeGillvray, 


own 


who has been living with him, 
moved his household woods in’ the 
next day, and heand his wife are 
now comfortably settled by them- 


‘ves on theirown farm, 


Sunday School Picnic. 


Swan Lake Sunday sehool 


has arrance iyrand pienie to be 
held in the ¢ eon Robert Dick's 
farm five miles east of Ponoka on 
July 4. Everybody invited to come 
with their baskets and enjoy oa 
Joie nT 1\ 

Dominion Day Concert. 

Pie teach tod pupils of the vil- 
lave * vol, assistedl by outside aid, 
will griv concert in the school house 
hie the evening of Dominion Day, 

TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1002, 
S o'clock \ good pro 


t will ered La most cor 
il vita risextended to all, An 
ultinissionm of Qe te lulte and be for 
onow be och ‘ Phe pao 
‘ Inwill be used in aid of a school 
rary 
Mat Reports 
Vheat fie ve 
mal ds 11 
Barley oy i 
(‘ie ( fecd perew S11 
ran 1.00 
Shorts ‘ S110 
| rn perowt $2.10 to B5.00 
Pooteat ber i An 
i levy i 
Bacter pert We to 17 
® ; 
| e pet tk. R. Sa 
{ l. Hel 


Jus st K eceived. 


% 
1 1) 

Kiankes, « I Deer 

HN | i Haehin 
1 Col pan typ it 
VK, ¢ \ Son 

. 
"| eetiii} 


Hs We ite 


LACOALBE, 


wlan 


Leave wor with 
A. REDD, Ponoka, 


areful and 


} 


-xperienced 


Can do 
ithe 


your work A trial 
thers fail 


Prices right. 
Work guaranteed, 


Conuvinces, 


j y TARA yy ad 
STOCK PUMPS. 
GEO HORN, 
Loca! 
Agent for 
TheCelebrated ANDERSON 
Double-Act ree Pumps, 
Piece prmapes itl principle and 
truction fron hey 
ive positively ant m nda " 
equiive priming, The S pumpel 
red th ! ‘ 1 { 
nod fa Linside tl 
ting pip 


Dressmaking. 


ce ere ne te ee, 


tly and iS 


ee Ate 


Mrs. L. M. Carson. 


Chipman Ave 


For Sale A e 


AT A 


Bargain. 


A Good, Level, Open Half Section 
Four and a Half Miles from 
Ponoka, 


C. C. REED. 


MORIN IIN 


LD). 


GSI 
For Sale! 
160 Acre Farm. * 


High and dry; 


no muskegs; yy 
V, no slouwhs; good build by 
H ines: school house on | 
vA corner, 14 miles (,) 
Y from depot (N 
Pa me 
O at *& | 
S vd 
fi ENQUIRE AT THIS OFFICE vd 


MORNINGSID#¥. 


Washing 


Ironing and Mending 

Neatly 
Satisfaction Guaranteed, 

MRS, LUCINDA GRIFFIN 


and Promptly Done 


i tanak win 


alae Wena Bank tf Cava 


Head office: 


AAA 
Ata 


MONTREAL, 


3) 


yy) 


S82 600,000, 


LACOMBE BRANCH’ 


Interest allowed on Deposits. 
A'general Banking Business 


R TAYLOR, Mp 


A Snap 


480 Acre-Farm at $8.00, 
Five Miles { 


from Ponoka. 


tit heot tl t farn i 
! | ot ! ‘ inte S1OO0 
vorth of improvements bed there 
oken Plenty of wood water 
For further particulars apply at 
wt .§ HERALD OFFICE, 


Ponoka 
WOOD YARD. 


Wood Bought and Sold 
\W elivere 


Lint vO 
its} (uston hie ait 
‘ le p Lam | to 
sta mia wit your t ‘ 
KAVE ¢ AT JONT LIVERY 
Wo. GG MERKLEY 


Barber 


Shop::: 
pz: 
Next door 
to Cine Shoy 
SALTS 
Bight Shaves $1.00, 
Hair Cut 25e. 


JAKE HUBER, 
) 


Propr 


wa Lots for sale 


IN 


Ont Os A. 


A 


Kasy terms 


ible pr Gene 
eral tine Oster, Hatimond & 
Nant Winnepos ( S. Lott 
Cal \ i 
I Pthiitpes, price ole pply to 
T. J. WEST, 
©. B. RB. A. Pon 


BOWSER'S CONCEIT. | 


HE DECIDES THAT HIS GRAY HAIR 
GIVES HIM A FALSE APPEARANCE 


In an Attempt to He 
and Re w His Vouthfal Apr 
ance the Old Man Tries a Barber's 


edy 


are 


Hintr Dye, With Sad Results, 
Copyright, 192, by C. B, Lev } 
HEN the Bowsers had re 


turned to the sitting room 
from dinner the other eve 
ing, Mrs. Bowser detected 
Mr. Bowser taking sly glances him 
self in the mantel mirror and evidently 
somewhat perturbed about his hair. 
She let it pass as one of his “streaks,” 
but after a time he looked at her ina 
half ashamed way and asked 
“Do you notice how fast my hair ts 
turning gray?’ 
“Not particularly,” answered 
“You bave been old enough these five 


she 


“WHAT DO Yot ENOUGH?" 
You haven't 


what there is o 


MEAN BY OLD 
years to have gray hair 
got a great deal, but 
it looks well,” 


“What do you mean by old enou 


he demanded, with the threat of a fam- 
ily row in bis tones, 

“Why, most men have gray hair 
after passing forty, don't they? You 


were forty-seven your last birthday, 
and” 

“Who sald I was forty-seven?" 

“Why—why" 

“There's no why-why about it. My 
true age is forty-two, If I look five 
years older, it's because I've had so 
much trouble with you. If you had 


your way about it, you'd make out that 
I was a doddering idiot. How old do 
you think folks take me to be with my 


hat on?" 
. Y ser wahie to Pass @ peace- 
and she theéfore put the 
‘) Pty esIX, 
thirty-six to thirty-eight, 
Bowser as his vanity could 
his face and 1don't know 
hould t these hairs to 
look ten years older, Only 
vy Bb vn was saying that I 
step of a man of thirty 
{ what can you do with them?" 
sould dye them, [ suppose he 
questioned as something like a 
nah « his face and he turned 
the glass again 
Mrs, Bowser laughed at the back of 
his head, She didu't mean t@ but she 
couldn't restrain herself I€ was one 
of Mr. Dowser's funniest as well as 


latest fads, 


“There 


uu go with your 


gle!’ he sh 1 as he turn 

“Ia there anything so excruciatingly 
funny in my putting a littl dye on my 
hair?) During the last four weeks you 


seein to have lost what little sense you 
ever had 

“It Just struck me as funny that you 
should turn to hair dye,” she explained, 


"Oh, it struck you, did it? You are 
aiways being struck If I make any 
particular move, T might have known 


that you would he-haw-he over it, but 
I was fool enough to ask your opinion, 
Nevertheless I shall go ahead and do 
as I please about it.’ 


“That Is, you will dye your hatr, ond 
perhaps you will look all the better for 
it. As you say, there no need of 
your looking ten years older than you 
really bid you bring home a bot 


tle of dye?" 


"Well, yes It not 
halr dye you find in the 
with the smell of a dead 
it, but something prepared expressly 
for me by Prof or Caton, the eminent 
tonsorial artist 
“The e@ ent barber—yes," mused 
Mr Bowser “He prepared some 
( . for you that will decelve even 
! w artist Well, I should ¢ 
it and see he t wor If you ' 
look to be only thirty, | shall feel | } 
a 
Mr, 2 er didn't | w her te 
gl or e, but i lly al heal 
ip to bh room and pply a 
to directidie, The family cat lad 
» watching tl as she lay on tue 
ue ind i he left the room she 
ed dow looked at Mrs, Tee 
an tuquiring ways She received 


a ike of the head in reply and walk 
ed over and sat down under the plano 
to await the coming of events Mr 
lik tr id won his point without loss 
oft h dignity, and he smiled as 
he sopped the dye over 
locks, Ile had paid 85 for 
preparation, and the eminer 

tist had guaranteed that 

vould be ¢ st vedlate 


the Fault | 


| 
change could be seen, and the bottle | 


and Bowser went down stairs together, 
Mrs. Bowser was reading and had no 
remarks to make, and it was ten min- 
before raised her eyes and 
took a look at the dyed hair, As she 
did so she gave a start of surprise and 
choked back an exclamation, 
“What's the matter with you?” 
Mr. Bowser, 
“T-1l—nothing 
“You jumped 
bitten you, 
in ny hair?” 


utes she 


asked 


as if had 


Do you see any difference 


something 


“I think I will go up stairs. My 
head aches,” 
“Got another cold) probably,” he 


growled as she left the room. 
also a bit mad about this hair dye 
I'll take a look in the glass and” 

Those white had not turned 
biack, but a queer brindle, and Mrs 
Bowser had realized that she must get 
out or explode, One look in the glass 
Jumped Mr. foot high, and 
as he came down on his heels he yell 
ed: 

“It can't be! It can't 
have dirt in ny eyes!" 


“She's 


hairs 


towser a 


be! I must 


But the color of that hair was the 
color of a brindle cow, and when he 
had satisfied himself of the fact his 


heart stood still for a minute 
rreat wave of relief came 


Then a 


“Its simply the first change, of 
course,” he whispered, “One more ap- 
plication and it will be black. What 


t fool I 
Ile wasn't over three minutes in put- 
ting on another coat, and he held his 


Was to get seared!’ 


head to the hot air register to dry the | 


dye the quicker, 
up and took look 
glass, his hair no longer 
but the color of a yellow dog. 

“By thunder! By thunder!” was all 
he could say he stood staring at 
himself and the cat was rolling over 
the floor in hysterics, 


When he straighten 
in the 
brindle, 


ed another 


was 


as 


Hope came again, however, 
wis probably three ply lair dye 
dle, yellow and black, 


plicat 


This 
brin 
The third ap- 
oge by bringing out the true gloss. It 
was made and dried ja, and Mr. Bow- 
ger consulted the glass again. What 
he saw reflected was a head of celery 
green and what Mrs, Bowser 
heard such a yell of fury and 
despair that was sure the plano 
inust have up one of its 
to be kicking over 
and chasing the eat about for 
a few minutes, and then there was the 
silence of death, She waited for half 
an hour and then slipped down stairs, 
The ent lay on the floor as if dead 


color, 

wis 
she 

lifted 


seemed 


legs, 


Some 


chairs 


. tnd 


Mr. Bowser was on his knees on the 
floor before a footbath full of soap 
suds. He was secking to restore his 
gray hairs and his old 


souped his green locks he muttered: 


“LT will see that eminent tonsorial 
artist, tomorrow, and I will take him 
by the throat, and I will ery ha! ha! 
hat and | will squeeze the life out of 


his lying, swindling ecareass and tram 


ple on his quivering heart!" 


And the cat lifted up her head and 
ehuckled, aud Mr Bowser softly re- | 
treated to her room M. Quan, 

How It Ended, | No Taste, 
The Elephant 


| (on the links) 
Then you have 
no taste for 


golf? 

| The Ostrich 

| Ugh! 1 should 
Biy not! T ney. 
er could go gut 
} ta percha, and 
| the jrons have 
}too muny cor. 
ners on them, 


don't youknow, 
to digest with- 
the ald of 
Duck, 


| out 


| pepsin, 
| 


| 
| 


Peellngs Hurt 


fou seem so 


Mae—What became | very sad,” said 
of that girl you had | the tender to 
the flirtation with at | the locomotive 
the seashore last sum "Yes, [ suffer 
hier? } sO Inanyrevers 

Lewis You mean | es at the hands 
the girl I thought Tj of the engineer, 


had a flirtation with, | vouknuow,”’ wae 
She married me, the reply. 

Silk, | 

Silk is the strongest of all vegetable 

or animal threads, It is three times as 


strong as a faxen thread of the 
bs “, 


sume 


A Vaycholtogtontl Deduction, 
“My ce of the 


ad the wife emi 


ch 


Ah, jealousy,” 
And he 


mused the professor 
nd 


sat down wrote a 


opment 


twenty 


page article on The Deve of 


Envy In the Minds of the Lower Grade 
of Dipeds 
Emotion Wa val, 

It was terr e even to see the vil 

ra dt eu I girl at the 
mit 

Oo ‘ 1 the old lady, “he 
“ 1} e died anyway Did you no-| 


rettes he smoked?" 


have in the mint are 


y making schemes,- 


on would take ten years off his! 


and as he 


THE PINGPONG FAD. 


SOCIETY TAKES UP NEW GAME FOR 
INDOOR AMUSEMENT. 


A Kind of Lawn Tennis That May Be 


Played on « Dining Table— Originated 


in England, Where It Is Popular—It 
Iias Reached Society in This Country 
as Well 


fashion- 
Not to 


ind most 
is pingpong 


| Society's latest 


able amusement 


| know it is to profess ignorance of the 
| very latest fad Vingpong is a sort 
| of table tennis amd gets its name 
from the pecullor noise made by the 
racket striking the ball, It is played 
with batthedoors and celluloid balls, 


Pneland, 
popular In 


comes from 


itimienselsy 


} 
| 

Pingpong 
| where it is 
| 
| 
| 


PLAYING PINGPONG 


fact, so Widely has it been taken up 
|} that players of acknowledged — skill, 
though ! ble walks of life 
| are welcotped to the very best 
| houses 

In Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal 
society has already acquired the pin 
ly ge habit 1 it is spreading to 
other ¢ wian citie 
Pingpo i played on a 
1 dinit tuble wit pecially prepare 
j end ¢ 1 A table even to 
wit fect and lt { that Width, 
w“ rhe t ‘ tl t ‘ ‘ ! Acro 
the tal i rected a net from five 
tc ‘ t n | ! tretched | 
lon posts chunped to the tat rhe 
1 het e vellum cove ad bat of 
the hind that used to be known : 
batt foe 

} » one 

at le The plas 
er b is called 
tl the striker 
ou rst game the 
triker out become the server, and 
So on altert rhe ball served 
must drop nvwhere on the table 
|} top beyond the net and is then in 
plas If it dro; into the net or off 
the table, it count to th striker 
out There is no second service, as 
jin Jawn tenn 

If the ball in play strikes any ob- 
ject above or round the table before 
it bounces on the table itself, net ot 
post excepted, it counts against the 
player lhe server wins a stroke if 
the striker out fails » return the 
service or knocks the ball of the 
table lhe striker out Wins a stroke 
if the server serves a fault, fails to 
return the ball or returns it so it 
{ off the t 

On cither pla r Winning his first 
stroke the core is ¢ led fifteen for 
that player On either player Win 
ning hi econd stroke the score is 
catled t t for that player On 
either 1! r Winning his third 
troke the score is called forty for 


| PINGPON( ERVING 

} that player, and the fe th stroke 

} won t either | er is scored gam 

} fe that player 

| I rth ! have won three 
troke fort na the score is 

| called de ci ind the next troke 


won by either player is scored advan- 


tage to that player. If the same 
player Wins the next stroke, he wins 
the me. If he loses the next stroke 
the score is again deuce, and so” on 
wntil either plaver wins the twe 
strokes immediately following the | 
ore of deuce, when the game is 
coved for that player. The player 
who wins six games Wins a set 
Pingpong is a successful indoor 


gatue because it gives an agreeable 
amount of physical exertion It is 
nor irksome cards and other 
social games that compel sitting still 


during an evening. 


like 


He Didn't Have to Kneel Down, 

Plora=—What a lovely ring! 
a lady's ring too. 

Ilorace—Yes, I thought you 
like it. 

Flora—Why, is it for me? 

Horace—You are a lady, aren't you? 

Flora—Ohb, dear! This is so sudden! 


would 


Last Fate Worse Than His First. 
Smith—Poor Wederly is having a 
hard time of it. His tirst wife got a 
divorcee from him, you know. 
Jones—Yes, and he has a bard time 
paying ber alimony, | suppose, 


Smnith—Worse than that. She is bis 

present wife's dressmuater, 
Two Trints, 

Tess—Aren't you going to choir re- 
hearsal tonight? 

Jess—No, 

“You'd better, We're going to give 
that new hymn a trial.” 


“Can't. im going to give 
4 trial neself.” 


An Object Lesson to Grant, 
This story is told of the first time 
Grant ever had charge of a large body 
of men sent out to give battle. He was 
colonel in the early part of 1862, de 
tailed to go to the relief of an Hlinois 


a new Lim 


And it's; 


A HOUSE APIARY. 
| FL G. Herman, New Jerses, Tella All About 
How He Was suecessfol in Rune 

| ning One-—the Viant. 

| The hives used are known as the 
Lon: Ideal and were made to order, 

| ‘They hold 20° Lang oth frames 
crossWise and are expressly used for 
extracte lt honey The total cost of 

| the hives, fixtures and house was 
£125, not counting the bees The 
top row of hives rests on a frame 
| just high enough so I can raise the 
| covers and look into them comfort- 
ably, as the interior view shows; the 
other row rests on the floor The 
| hives are only one story, so there 
s no use for queen excluders and no 

|} tiering up to be done. 

} The hive entrances match the  cor- 
responding slots in the side of the 
house and when the bees enter the 

H slot or entrence they wo directly into 

| their respective hives. Bach alter- 

darker color 


nate notice is painted a 
for the purpose of helping the 
to mark their hive 

The bee house was built in) March. 
About the middle of April, when the 
weather was favorable to open hives, 


bees 


areal MP 
~ CF 


regiment, supposed to be surrounded FERIOR OF HOUSE APTARY 
by Confederates at Palmyra, Mo., but | I took the Lo Ideal hives into my 
when he arrived the regiment had te home apiary d transferred the bees 
lieved itself by retiring. Grant then; «nd comb from the chaff hives into 
went out to Florida, in the same state, | them. It was ot necessary to take 
nnd as the regiment tolled over the hill tht fram a ‘ 7 wa hisoty Uae 
beyond which the enemy was supposed rae Bate Pail th hed stopped fly- 
to be In waiting Grant says he would) i. 7 closed the entrances with wire 
have “given anything to be back again) jetting, loaded them on a wagon and 
in Illinois.” drove to the bee house and they were 
At the top of the hill, instead of! soon arranged in position. The next 
troops drawn up in battle array, aut} day, which was pleasant, the — bees 
saw a deserted camp. “It occurred to; came out in great t imbers and evi- 
me at once that Harris had been ag| dently became somewhat confused 
much afraid of me as I had been of! a8 to which were their right hives 
him,” said Grant. “From that event to] @nd three hives were deserted, — the 
the close of the war I never experienc. | Pees having joi ed some of the oth= 
; ers. Dut 17 built up nicely and in 
ed trepidation upon confronting an en- | May I divided tnree of the stronger 
emy, though I always felt more or less) gigs and mode the full complement 
anxiety. I never forgot that he had as) of go. In the latter part of May I 
much reason to fear my forces a8 TF) pomoved the division board and filled 
bad his.” the hives with frames of comb found- 
ation 
A Trafalgar Incident, There owas not a swarm to issue 
There is a most striking and remark-} which was as I had hoped. The bees 
able passage in the journals of Captain) are always comfortable, being shaded 
Frederick Hoffman which have been) from the hot sun, and they seem to 
published under the title of “A Sailor) have sufficient room on 20 frames in 
of King George.” ne hous It is ry comfortable for 
In giving bis account of the conclud. | ')« rator to I took from this 
ing phase of Trafalgar Captain Hoft- house in Septer : hE ators y 4 
man, who was on board Collingwood's Th, 7 - 7 nt ‘ i aa gest Ade h 
ship, says: “I must not omit that when). yy), ah RY gies th it Vani : 
the commander of the French fleet,| ). 0 gjacced a poor aaa 
Admiral Villeneuve, was brought) ,),,., e enough surplus combs bui 
alongside us instead of the Victory, he) | expect an ave crop of 1,000 
was informed it was not Nelson's ship. | pounds a ve fre this house No 
‘My God,’ said be, ‘you are all Nel- rther expense is necessary, only 
sons!’ "’'—London Globe, rent and car n bringing home 
t ho I \ 1 the house dur 
Mensuring the Heat of the Body it miner on once every week or 
By means of an Ingenious Instrument | two —F. G. Herm in Orange Judd 
Invented by Dr. Lombard of New York | Farmer 
it is ascertained that a woman's body papa ae 


is warmer than that of a man by about 
three-fourths of a and 
times as high as 


GROUND GYPSUM, 


Practical Vaperience in Using It te Ade 


one degree, while in vantage in the stable. 
no instance bas the warmth of a man's Ground gypsum, according to one 
body been found to be greater than of our farm investigators, vy une 
that of a female. It ts also definitely | doubtedly be used to Vantage in 
ascertained that children are decidedly | the stable The nitrogenous come 
warmer than adults, the difference bee | pound in the urine by the aid of cer 
Ing about 1 degree F., the younger the | tain micro on ms, always pres- 
child the greater the diversity, A dif. | ent in the air, is converted very 
ference in the heat of the sides of the | "' int« bonate of ammonia, 
bedy Is discovered to be an Invariable V} volatile and will escape if 
law. The left side of the head and ox. | SMe suitable a whent or fixer is 
tending downward to tl base of the not present, G i ich «a fixer, 
oeck Is much hotter than the right side. |. nverting the cnate into sul 
—————— Or ee) phate of Which is not vol- 
A Merge roof bor the 
A commer al t eler Practical es isions from exper- 
in the evele trade on J ir t ure 1) that the proper place 
the Atlantic adds th t tou | i the stable, where 
tion of jokes on new ndoubted h reater waste of ni- 
fathers ur n, as yiia, frequently oc- 
The hero is tl nufacturor of nd ! When the manure 
the wheel wl h the nar tor sells heay kept cor et and moist ther 
Deing com ed t aw on a t amy cor ' e escape of ame- 
busi S trip at it tl Lime hr mn t 
terest d event W t | ni t oO 1 the availa- 
ed, } eft orde for the nu to ft phe } id It to 
e him re ding to the| ! ‘ ri able loss of 
fo “ for pot h to i mi be du 
a t Ge Bs a tO a ¢ n iit of drainage from 
em ! to the board 
. r I fel rrived fac Vhis dra ae no doubt it 
tl 1 1m ‘ ved by the ater din kee} 
! whe a later he | in the manure constantly moist 
received t ( ng the} !! result cor te tl cor 
7] that of po h cannot be 
| ae The Denver News ded t wW ut t 
ir Sec ' t cone! floor if t 
Frosting Alauminiom, 1 to he kept moist t ra 
To give a frosted surface to alu- | or art ment 
minium articles remove all grease and | - wes 
dirt by dipping them in benzine. After! Suop Talk, 


this dip them first into a solution 
stroug enough to blacken the metal of 
caustic potash, next into a mixture of 


two parts nitric and one part sulphuric 


| acid, then into concentrated nitric acid 


and lastly into a mixture of equal parts 
of vieegar and water, finishing by 
washing them thoroughly in waver and 
drying in bot sawdust 


The only time some employers ralse 


their clerke is when they play poker toe 
keller, 


She Wae Not Doll, 
“You've had some acquaintance with 
Miss Withers, Is she really as dull as 
| Most people seem to think her?” 
| "Dull? Well, I should suy not, She 
| cuts me every time we chance to meet.” 


4 


AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA the arrival of Mr. nnd Mrs. Bruder. | The young chaplain was cesirous of | 


lot. There was an understanding, bow- 
ever, a sort of feeling, although no 
words bad been spoken, that somehow 
Smith would settle matters, and so 
it was determined that no one from 
among the strikers should meet Bruder 
at the depot aud attempt by moral or 
muscular force to turn him back, 
Smith knew what was expected of 
bim by bis friends and relatives; he 
also knew that the suspicious eyes of 
the president were upon him,and hence 
the delicacy of his position, He hated 
being “double faced,” but he had a 
very comfortable niche indeed, and 
times were exceedingly hard in those 
parts, He reflected with considerable 
disgust that it was quite unjust that 
he, who bad no personal interest In the 
matter, should be the one upon whose 
shoulders the task of adjusting the af- 
fair should be trust. ’ 
That explains why Smith was per- 
turbed upon the arrival of Mr. and 
Mrs, Joseph Bruder, It also explains 
why he alone was at the depot to meet 
the distinguished pair, It is an axiom 
that good luck always comes to the 
lazy. Smith was a lazy man, which 
accounts for the piece of good luck 
which came to him on the morning of 


know nothin’,” snapped Smith, “They 
come, and they've gone, ain't they?” 
And then to modify therebuke the good 


soul continued in a tone that smacked | 


suspiciously of tenderness as he puffed 
his pipe reflectively in the darkness: 
“Strange: I used to know those folks 
years »—didn’t know it till terday— 


they was a good deal younger then— | 


just married, | guess—they were pret- 
ty poor—had a little baby that died—-I 
don’t know, but folks aroun’ there said 
the little thing died—cos it didn't— 
get—enough—ter eat.” 


It Was a Dream, 

When a certain divine was a younger 
man and chaplain at the University 
of Pennsylvania, like other ministers 
who filled that positign he was much 
troubled over the rps a lack of at- 
tention from the students during the 
morning exercises in the chapel, 

The exercises hardly ever continued 
for more than fifteen minutes, Some 
of the students were in the habit of 
taking their books into the chapel and 
studying there during the services to 
make up for their tardiness of the 


night before in not preparing their les. | 


6008, 


“Infusorlal earth,” Still, if one knows 
much about dynamite he ls aware that 
this Is the stuff employed as an Abe | 
sorbent to hold the nitroglycerin of 
that famous explosive. It was Nobel, 
the great Swedish engineer, who 
founded a number of attractive prizes | 
to encourage scientific progress, who 
first discovered the trick by whieh | 
nitroglycerin could be safely handled, | 
Infusorial earth ts composed of the 
siiicionus shells of twinute vegetable 
organuisins, diatoms which reveal won- 
derfully complicated and beautiful 
structures under the microscope, 


Gotng Right Ahead, 

Alphonso—Gwendolyn, why are you 
£0 cruel as to keep me waiting for iny 
answer? It is now ten minutes since 
I asked you to be my wife, 

Gwendolyn—Oh, pardon me, I for 
got. I was simply choosing my brides. 
malds.—Brooklyn Life 


Pen Steel, 

The sheets of steel for penmaking 
are in their original condition elght 
fect long and three feet wide, From} 
these strips are cut wide enough to 
perialt of the cutting of three or four | 
peas, 


= ee mace -ac R me oe ted i the Gove ened 
Bab Armstrong's two-year-old baby | breaking up the habit, so one morning | CROKES’S SUCCESSOR. ‘ ervice rule r a 
HE PASSING boy had died of cholera morbus a few preceding his customary five minutes’ | stan Who Deacned the Oregon In Made od, ‘The teache 
days before, and the sorrowing par-| address he spoke as follows: Supreme in Orvanisation of | wore? ev ! 
OF MR and MRS. ents, who were farmers, had put the “Young gentlemen, last night I New Vork's tiger J never ¢ harged, exer 
Mf bd little creature in a simple pine box and dreamed I was here in the chapel ad-| ypu jyon chosen leader of ‘Tamunany AEE ches A Nek is 
JOSEPH BRUDER were sending him down the road to be! dressing you. And as I spoke I saw) yo gq jccood [iencrd Croker. so g | hy 
buried In the Armstrong family bury- | every eye fixed upon me, every man) che head of ¢ New Yor Peniwe= | en 
* Dod Ing ground at West Camden. The tiny attentive, while in all the chapel there | oy. + Mr. Lewis Nixor new : Go rian bere 
By Henry Irving ge. morsel of bumanity was at that m@® was not a book opened, and then [To than half an ho before being chos- | Germany is now the best edu 
so ment resting in the freightroom of the knew it was a dream.” en that he was even a possibility for | nat of Bure 
Copyright, i901, Reaver Meadows depot. | } the office, Af expressing his desire | py of ve nan a 
By Henry Irving Dodge. | As Smith limped down the platform German Scotch. for a rest, Mr. Ct eee ‘hint Jin mar ris of ‘ 
t to say for t Vixot At leo poorly pa h t | t 

VVVVVYYVVYVYVYVYYYYVVYW"” | (Ord Mr. and Mrs Joseph Bruder he “4 good story comes from Syne | eee a are oe i Gh hoween 5 t 

“ “our” nu tony looked through the open door of the . > : Cmhana te vo KnO m i ! 4 | i ront of he in 4 r te 

Big Four” pulled into Beaver Mead: | rreigntroom Ria got hie inspiration, pried seit rece san Piadh ube Perea think ho Is Just the man for the | add to their income by odd pence 
OOF Catae Sue cue Ctr Gil od | Hen we deconted Broder, | business firms asking whether com | Cn FECL and keen nd Ag ado the } It Cleans Jewelry 
and Joseph Bruder and bis wife got) “Waitin? for Harris’ team, ain't yer?’ | Oe a vo He W tart in under good | Toott der is ¢ velle: 
down from the passenger coach that Bruder looked at his wife, and she munications to Australian merchants) so! @ Will sti in und ‘ooth powder is an excellent cleans. 
was trailing behind six “flats” of rails. | gaid, “Yes,” " | Should be written In English or ‘in the | \''* ° ices and will succeed — without | ep of fine filigree Jewelry, 

’ S. . - "hy loubt. - 
Bruder was six feet four and broad, “Goin’ ter work on the job, ain't language of the yb g Mr. Nixon is a Marylander by Camman Cows fur Ieeor Cntite 
and his wife was five feet and narrow. | yer?" It recalls an astonishing trade cir- | birth. In common with nearly all] I@ is not only possible to stare 
Bruder carried a huge valise that cost |” Again Bruder looked at his wife, and | CU@F Feceived a short time ago by a with common cows as a foundation 
a dollar and had done service, also an | again she said, “Yes,” | business firm fn Glasgow from a Ger- and bulll: we e good hepa 
ax. Mrs. Bruder wore mitts and @ “Well, I'm right glad ter see yer,” | Shae iy varsatie th a ieiber In of beef cattle, but it i ' of 
plaintive, piquant smile, In her eyes | gaid the unconscionable diplomat ef- Mi poh Hom Phares lavigne of toe oh age at i Ph a lh 
Yibaa A deta as otiadba att for the | fusively. “I tell yer, we've been havin’ try, It was in the best “kallyard? style he ha a th 5 enna tl Ke bee 
disparity in their sizes. This seemed | great goin’s on aroun’ here.” and spoke of a ‘muckle consignment @ w ‘hi, 6 \ : Rahs Perea ink TARA RAE 
to be a sore point with the little wo- Again Bruder looked at his wife, and ehentoala’ ® Sg .: ee a x. Auntie he orres in 
man, for she was ever on the alert for | again she said “Yes” softly and press- | SA mart hie Henne wie. . 
the quizzing glances of strangers, and | ed a little closer under the shelter of At Second Hand, sell sich a herd i \ , 
if one should stand apart and glance | tis mighty thigh. A Highland laird who could not af- t a lot of mor i 
at the odd couple he was sure to have | “Between you and me,” continued ey .q ty keep his own piper was accus- so¥i I should advoca 

» wily S “ 7 . » rs— 
his gaze arrested by a plaintive glance | the wily Smith, “these woodchoppers= | toiied to employ the village piper when ip t d every 
from the woman which said as plainly | 1 mean the Beaver Meadow fellers,” | yo jad eo npany. ; tr © that ¢ \ 
as speech, “Please don't make fun of | he hastened to explain as a slight cons) G1 one occasion, through some over- nh experies hile anak 
us.” traction of Bruder’s forehead warned sight. Donald had not been given his Place tl erat ma 

But the man never bothered his head | him that any slur upon the craft would | pyciiinary glass of whisky before he thout eri ' 
about what other folks thought. He} not be welcorue— don’t know whed | jocan his performance, Accordingly, sad Nad eH eaS 
was a woodchopper, and that's all he | they're well off.” he found bis bn tia tioet fetrace it through 
knew or cared, Next to his wife he He paused, and Bruder looked at his |... temper, The laird asked bim what : ar t neh} , 
loved his ax, and it used to be his wife, but she remained silent. 7 | was the matter with It, and Donald re- lig ' Bi ts ; : 
pride that Le could put a keen enough Of course I aln’t got nothin’ against | jing that the leather was so hard that ' » he ‘ yp to 
edge on it to shave with. He used to these men here, and {t may nut sound he could do nothing with It. ' 1 If Ie t to 
lay his cheek fondly against the purple | Well comin’ from me, me bein’ in the | wy nat will soften it?’ asked theanxe| others in the Sout t the time of | an ' to } 
blade and pat it and call it bis darling, | ¢™ploy of this corporation, as ain't sup: | gous jaira, | the civil wat parents were inlit out with sn ' 
And the ax seemed to understand him, | Posed ter show no partiality, but seems “Och, Just whusky!” said Donald, j Inoderate cire hut his edu- | go the lo n 
for it would bark with quick delight} ter me these men Is a little unreason-| AC tuimbtor of whisky was at once} Cition Was in no manner negleeted 
when bis giant arms swung it aloftand | able. Yer vant he went on as neither brought, which Donald immediately | 0% '8 te the? ' ne Twelve Nest Hardy Herbaceous Perenniils 
bite the maple and bury its nose to the Bruder nor his wife spoke, “times have drank. } © school t We : an These are easily and 
point where the tempered steel joined | been pretty hard around here, with) yoy paseal!” sald the laird. “Did! hie a: +h cured, last a long 
the softer stuff crops fallin’ and a good deal of sick! 4. not say it was for the bagpipes?” |. mrt rate cared for and pro 

When Bruder got off the train, he | Bess In the neighborhood, and T think | © oc yess, yess,” said Donald, “but | eho! ‘ rin tho! 42. noem not : 
looked around in a sort of inquisitive, these men ought to been glad to get she will be a ferry pecullar pipes this, | t tutes n | ‘ at A Bt the sbtbadat ; : ( 
defiant way and put his band clumsily | §teady employment, Of course they're | oy, ave tikes it blawed tn.” wee follows roo 
around his wife and drew her shoulder | Teally tn the power of the company, — thcdedi ea ES lpeeran wine thack ; Perey E pl i 
over against bis thigh. There was no | ©°% they ain't got no money, and the’ sot Drain Work. True, | improved the « rp } i : nar y 
one at the depot but the agent, a vet: otficers knows It, and so they cuts “The Jury] to him thr ht San TAD BVITAFOR i oa ‘1 
eran in the business, the tenure of | down their wages, Now, some of tert wos out two] British Ad ty a > ATS et \ 
whose position was due to five toes finds out that the big fellers is makin | days and then | high tare ‘ t li Viral hlea \ ; ; 
that he had years before contributed | dead loads of money, and so they | failed to come | Shen sith ha bee lower beds unt t 
to the annual list of accidents on the makes a big kick and goes on strike, jto an agree-| " p me vi Mts ten c and faclination t 
road, Smitl bad beard that Bruder | 80 the company jest shuts down, and [| ment.” hav mad CHARA HG Plant in shrubl + i9OS 
was coming to take the place of one of | beard the superinte ndent say as that “That prove#| sisetod the world ov nd fence corn 
the striking woodcboppers, and it tilled | they was goin’ to start a process of conclusively | ihe Orecon, the Indiana and the Mas | ENO i STE 
him with grave concern, Almost all of starvation, Of course I don’t want that we ought | Grenusert atleotewhich are knowin | band a Sidieate : 

f ¥ or’ ' . ur S i t ! ! 
\ his relatives belonged to the strikers, that to go no further. to have women | by their performances and which | y . ' 
@ and bis sympathies were deeply with Did the company treat the men juries.” at the time of their design. were ade | | n ' ' 
them. On the other band, it fell to Lis falr asked Mrs, Bruder. E “Why so?” =| mitted to be the most powerful Ves- | 
lot to show ostentatious loyalty to the ot course it did,” said Smith quick- “Well, you! sels and the best all-round hters pyar ’ 
company. Beaver Meadows was the ly. opt they got f Sakae pay rin know a jury of float Pibbadmnean bs Pesan 
ow , f money out any way they like? Couldn’ ; s he ability and judgment so to 
chief “woodin’ up” point of the road, ’ ; ; ; ry : -g| Women would | 
For miles the rad HL aia country yield. | these men pick up and leave if they | Miss Spondulyks Ihave disagreed | Erapple with mechanical problems, | Making an Omelet, 

, aimthine e stubborn poll save | didn't iike ier” Mr. Chappington, 1)! ag | naval selence and tactics and vexed | A frequent cause of failure tn mak- 
ed nothing from its stubborn soll save “Most of these men has their own | Wouldn't wear such a evOner tha 8 } question f ene ne and artillery | ing omelets ia in the use of too many 
stunted beech and knotted maple, ¢ : ya ; eo | Chat.”—Cincin- | ‘ tint t 0 sf » . : 

homes, hasn't they?” asked Mrs. Bru- | bish collar if 1 were as to give ea ctor its proper vi eggs ata time, Four egus make an 

The president of the company that Ace A Pa he Aid eee! you. You don't know | #@th Enquirer, iw in thi reat work won Mr. Nix-| omelet easy to handle, If more are 
supplied the rallr ad with wood wis “Yos, they has,” said Smith, “but if | how absurd you look. a — lon immediate rece ion It Was | needed, it is better to make a Kecond oF 
Smith's backer. A nod from bim would . Tough eleven year » that these battle a thind ; 
have dislodged that worthy from the they keeps on this way they won't rp ; Marat sa ree Fy even a thir one 

7 erry ; ae a | have no one left in their homes.” Then He seems to ed NA ha negl Rcd Aneel feel ro make a plain omelet beat the exes 
comfortable niche that afforded him a be a hardened | vOW that io ould nol ughly ting whites | 

ivi 2. 8 ‘ae be. | be added as he walked toward the of- au TRAMACICanE NAHI nL fi pis the | thoroughly, not separating whites l 
comfortable living. So Smith was be- ip criminal’ re | |! I ! f \ Add a tabl onful of milk and 
tween the devil and the deep sea, His fice: “Ye'd better come in and sit ise haga © | work that he t did show that | SOs AGG A (adlesPOOnt Us OF MK At 
! . t was with the strikers Rininters down, Harris’ team may not be here jmarked the) |, | esses a capa of grasp. | & Saltspoonful of salt for every exe 
at with tt m any. That's why his | fer an hour yet, They generally comes prosecutor, ing the ditt of contiict posi- , Put a teaspoonful of butter on the end 

5 > company, { ; : r “You | ‘ . tte . t 
bed Lobes De dela bata. ay at ter meet the down train, ‘Big Four’ is Yes,’ @8+ | tions and th n to give each | of a knife (a palette kulfe tat but a 
usually placid mind was filled with waitin’ hore fer it ter pass.” sented the] its proper we t case knife will do) nelet 
perturbation when he beheld the lum. | Wallin ler “Aa gut \abar Uictiaealloecnt eee eee Pa arate 

t . h Bruder and the He adroitly halted the couple in Judge; mive | r, Ninxot edo in Th) n; pan thoroughly on bottom an ides, 
bering set es Pat a t vc a the ta: front of the open door of the freight- sentenced bint | borough me t ‘ ye Turn in the egg mixture and keep the 
diminutive vite A. AM = : : room, and instantly the maternel eye four times, but | ©! YOuss NAY ed t : Bas pun in motion on a bot part of the 
boose of Big Four, ‘ font his | Of Mrs, Bruder caught the little coffin, | time seems to / atta Het fi Mcdanaa ty , 4 ton, | stove #0 that one part will not cook 

Bruder bad an arm as long as Lg “Whose is that?” she asked, | make no fin Caen ( , H iat) | faster than another, When the eggs 
wife's tongue and could fell at a blow ° “That's Cy Selden’s baby,” said Chappington (week | pression on ne Pl sehr LN heat yt aoe i rf have become sutliciently trum on the 
either kind of jackass, BURAD a Smith, lying heroically. Jater)—Is this bettah, | him.’ — Phila. | at (pete eld rapipay bottom of the pan, run the hulfe care 

. . , * > br 30 oe ¢ ; ‘ : : wc lice ad : 
brote, Aire, Brade Da ih ce th Mrs, Bruder looked at her husband, | Miss Lily?— Chicago} delphia North ED fully under and loosen t elet so 
the outfit, She took charge ice t 8 then back to Smith. “What ailed itz’ | News. American, SWINBURNE that it will easily slide to and fro, Then 
peat when added Visapersdh “ ane she asked, “Cholera morbus?” = ae SF cover for a minute or two and ralse 
Joseph only enough for Aap i On the | Smith drew closer and lowered his ‘ Bribes in Advanee, Gromtest Living Poet Busy Compiling a| the pan a trifle from the stove, so that 
pi Ae di to oA ; et sid leemed voice a bit, “That's what they give Brigge—t you are going to have Volume of selected Poems broom the t mow hot score ‘ e the 
WUE) ee Sr ig No ane out,” he said, “but between you and | S0Ur fortune told by the new astrolo His Own Works top is “settling.” Stide the kaife un 
A COmDIRA OD id He bby +4 Pena me me it didn’t have enough ter eat.” ger Gown town, Let me give you a Algernon Charles Swinburne, who | der, fold the omelet over and serve at 
ever knew wiiere they came bi ‘lant Just then Smith found sudden bust- | Pointer, If you want him to predict |ig pow busy at work upon the com | once, 
that score Bruder himself was el en | ness In the ticket office, where he re- that you will one day be rich, Just give | pilation of a volume of pooms — s¢ | 
with a persistency that defied a ue mained until he heard the booming of handsome tip. ; jlected from his works, is the fore | Women of Today. 
subtle Intluences of bucolic diplomacy. the down train, when he went out on s—That’s all right. I'l give him | most living poet and is rewarded by | The women of today are better edu 
Surimise said he was an ex-convict | ¢4 tne platform to pass up the mails, | @¥ note for a thousand or so, payable | many excellent critics as one of the | cated and hence superior in every way 
And: AS, Chapier and verve of Te nyt He lingered for a moment and watch- | When 1 become a_millionaire, as wives, mothers, housekeepers and 
were not forthcoming this comfortab 4 ed “Big Four’ pull out from the sid- apa nS (i niembers of the community to those of 

~ ar ' , rery. gc “ ° “ neo nm he e enter 
theory crystallized into a very goor ing; then he looked all around. There in the whole catalogue of: lohemte a ntury age, and they are trea ! 
counterfeit of fact, Was no one in sight. cals. minerals and rare elements.’ ti th fur more respect by the no of 

When the woodchoppers learned that “ “dyer d Bill?” asked Jack | px. Wy) : " te the Lhousebold than formerly, Women's 

1 8 How'd yer do it, © asked Jack | prices of which are quoted every week 
Joe Bruder was coming to take Cy Sel- . ¢ igh rhile half doze ¢ influence In all directions steadily in- 
j Lundy that night, while a half dozen jy trade fournals perhaps no name {8 
den's job, they knew there woul] be} oi ce ¢ ked 1 listened ’ } J : | creases with their bigher development 
7 strikers smoked anc stened, ‘are -, ‘ pry an | 

Y » were a determined ,, | more puzzling to the uninitiated than \ irall : rpg 

trouble, for they were a 4 “1 didn't do nothin’, and I don't | Naturally they are far more contented 


and bappy with all the privileges they 
now enjoy than they were under the 
old restraints here is nothing that 


could be borrowed from the past which 

| would Improve their present condition, 
When woman fully awakes to the 
benuty and value of science, philosophy 
and government, then will the rst note 


of perfect barmony be touched; then 
will the great organ of humanity t 
played on all its keys, w every 
rightly adjusted, and the lo loftier 
strains, the march of ely zution will 


be iImineasurably quickened, 


In Wenring Vetta, 


“Tlow many women are persistently 
ruining the ‘bloom’ of their lips and 
the contour of cheeks at ill pleasant 
‘eX press ” by ploning their veils too 
tichtly across the face,” sald a w in, 
“Observe the women on the streets, 

you will see any ouniber of them 
at frequent lotervals "pe outt t 
lips so as to push off t f 
the tightly drawn veil aud u 
sclous that the pecullar action has 
rowh into a fixed bh t or that it 
mikes a perfect cnr ture of t 


fuces every tine they do it, 


A GIRL OF GRIT 


vy MAJOR ARTHUR GRIFFITHS 


“A little check! There! Keep what's 
over after you've bought a nice bit of 


“Twill now wish you a very good morr~ 
ing 

Jewelry for Mrs. 8. You've been long 

suffering with me and shall be the first 

to share my luck.” 

Out in the streets, along King street, 
down Pall Mall, [ trod the pavement 
vith the conscious air of a man who 
had beard good news. Friends 1 pass- 
ed saw it plainly on my face and ral 
lied me on my beaming looks and 
buoyant demeanor. They had not left 
me when | walked through the swing 
ing doors of Sykes & Sarsfleld’s bank 


I was no longer the humble suppliant | 


for a pitiful overdraft, but the pos 
sessor of a fine balance, who could 
hold tis bead high Roy usually wait 
ed patiently outside, but today | eo 
couraged bin to enter at my eels, 


CHAPTER I 
AT TIE INTELLIGENCE OFFICE 


As I left the bank, where I bad been | 


wnest cordially received, with my sov 


mr) purse full and the olce crisp | 
0 carefully put by io ty | 


hotes for 
! cetbook, T began at last to believe 
in my fortune. There is a solid, unmis 
takable reality in the chink o? good 
gold, while the supple civility of the 
great financiers, who had so lately 
looked black at my overdrawnu account, 
proved how completely my position 
Was changed 

The torning’s adventures and sur 
prises bad oecupled much time, and it 
Vus bow getting late; past noon, ip 
fact. We members of the “intelligence” 
of honor to be in good 
time at the otfiee—an hour or more 
earlier than this, It bad hardly occur 
ced to me that | need not go to the of 
fice at all You see, | had been some 
1S years under discipline and not many 


jours ab archimillionaire Besides 
there is such a thing as 
public servant, eng i 
work, and T could not, would 
not, have neglected it willlngly; no, bot 
for the wealth of the Ladies 

So LT stepped briskly down the steps 
below the Duke of York's column and 
crossed the park at my very best pace 
Por all that, | was overtaken near 


Pilrdenue ilk by some one who balled 


ut coming quite close, 
“One word, sir, | pray, in your own 
best interests But, sakes alive, keep 
k that hound Hie is a tine beast 
o doubt, but Vd rather bave bim 
rther away 
Quiet, Roy! My dog will not barin 
uu.” TL said elvilly “But at this mo 
tment lam very much pressed 
“If you will allow me to walk with 
you a few yards, no more, | reckon I 
< 


nu oe use for totruding upou your 
pu Wis as open to him as to 
ranged himself along: | 

el det sbjections, 1 nfess I, 
oo, Was cul sto bear whi » bad 
to 

You lave en s, sit be begin 

j ind i ed £0 ¢ il as 
{ j athae tl wa 
| ' Ile \ ib 
ure ed, weat 
! Va 1 ‘ 
' : ‘ , wl 

\ ; ‘ t of t 

ey ! a f 
1 ‘ 
emu nt ! ! ser 3 

Ir it i ig tuatter 

vat yi Will soon 
Ox that They mean misehlet.’ 

Ile spoke it Ike a sentence of death 
fl m ! very much in earnest, yet 
Tt | hardly take it seriou 

“St rt it senarcely affects me, 
20ut it is my business to risk my 
iife Phe queen haw sometinnes en 

1h are mine,” 
hese | speak of are altogether your 
own, captiin-people who grudge you 


bew wealth 


1 ird then? 
“Licard! he erled, with great seorn 
is nothing | do not know about 
you, captain, tlow did you enjoy the 

eron the Cuyual river, and were 
the may you got at Angostura very 


“lush, man, bush! Who and what] 


are you What the mischief are you 


e it plain to you that T have | 


oe 


driving at? 
By this time we had entered Queen 


Anne's gate and were at the door of |!or 


the ottice. 

“Is this your bureau?” he now asked 
“May | not go inside with you, only for 
one moment? The matter Is urgent. 
It affects you very close Your dan- 
ger isimminent. They are bound, these 
enemies, to do you an injury—a terrible 
Injury.” 

“Oh, well, then, it must keep,” I said 
petulantly, “I cannot give you any 
yore time now; | am expected here. 
I suppose Sir Charles bas arrived?’ I 
asked of the office messenger, old Ser- 


genant Major Peachey 


“Yes, sir, he has been here these 
three hours, He came—on his bicycle 
soon after 0 a. m., and be has asked 


for you, I think, twice.” 


“There, your business must keep, 
Mr.""— 


“Snuyzer. I bow to your decision, | 


but if you will permit me, I will call 

in Clarges street this evening at’— 
“If you must come, come about 5. 

Good day,” and I passed into the office, 
I shared my room at the “intellig 


nee 


with a colleague, Swete Thornhill, of | 


the artillery, a lively youth out of 
hours, but who stuck to Lis work man- 
fully—more so than any of us, and we 
were by po means idle men. 


“Thought you were dead,” he said | 
shortly, and without looking up from | 
his papers; “wonder you took the | 


troubl e to come at all.” 

“L was detained by something spe- 
clal, Important business. Anyhow, 
it's no affair of yours,” | answered, 
rather nettled, 

“Yes it is, when It throws me out of 
my stride. I wish you'd make up your 
mind either to come or stay away al- 


together. There bas been a regular | 
| 
hue and ery for you all the morning, 


and I've been disturbed abominably. 
I have those calculations of the com- 
parative penetration of the pew pro- 
jectiles in band, and they take some 
doing.” 

“Well, keep your hair,on. I don't 
want to disturb you. But who was it, 
anyhow?" 

“The boss chief himself, Collingham, 
Sir Charles. He bas sent three times 
for you, and came in twice. Wanted 
you for something pressing. Now, I 
belleve, he is doing the job himself, 
Wise man. Do it a blamed sight bet- 
ter than you or any man Jack of us.” 

At this moment an office messenger 
came in with a buge bundle of papers, 
Which he placed befor ine on my 
desk, They were enveloped in the 
usual a jacket.” which meant ex 
treme urgeney, nod on the outside was 
written, ina big, bold buud, "“Cuptia 
Wood —speak.” 

“He' Il do most of the talking, I ex 
pect.” went on Swete Thornhill mali- 
clously, “He's fit to be tled. Go in, 
nian, at once, and take your punish- 
ment.’ 

The distinguished officer at that time 
head and chief of our 
Major General Sir Charles Collinghan 
Vail K. «. B., one of the most notabie 


soldiers of the day, ardent, fearless 


hly skilled, strong in counsel, fore 


} miost in the tleld, who had served al 


in all the wars, great 
recent years and had 
mnade a close study of the selence of 


edt nnd wide, Knew men and many 
cifles, was 
as in camp, popular in soclety, which 


he cultivated to lis spare mo 
hough he allowed notl 
the way of his work, ‘T 
first, and first In the service was 
all important, transcendently 
department, as he thought It, over 
Which he presided 
Sir Charles expected —nay, exacted 

a Iike devotion from us, bis staff offi 
utters of duty he 
ruled with o rod of trot Yone of us 
liked to face him when he was put out, 
which, It way be said, was not seldom, 


g to stand in 


service 


cers, Whom in all 


for he was choler although not cross 
grained, Under a stern face and rough 
manner he had a kindly nature far 
down, for he did not wear his heart 
upon his slee certainly not for an 
erring subordinate, as he considered 
me just then 


(TO BE CONTINVED,] =H 
The vitrieal Scenery, 
Movable seenery was first used in 
Ituly in the year 1508, It was tue In 
vention of an Itallan arehitect named 
Peruzzi 


Westminster Abbe 
Omicials of W r 


feos ogereygath 


over $2,000 when a 


wemorlal is 


The man who foolishly does me 
wrong, L will return him the protec- | and fertile garden, 
tion of inv ungrudging love the 


more the evil that comes from him, 


the more the good shall go from ime 
Buddha 


With love the heart becomes a fair 
glowing with sun- 
shine and warm hues, and exhaling 
sweet odors; but without love it is 
a bleak desert, covered with ashes.— 
| Charles Warren 


This case of ‘Treneman, the well-known butcher, of 


sponsible for 
, dropsical swellings, 


such times 


mindicine I 


Oe how . 


ig Bebe op tp 
he Saar goyebyrty 22 « 


law Hibben fenpatnig be 


a 


POOR DIGESTION 


MISERABLES 


partinent was | 


fession as well, He bad travel- 


LEGS SO SWELLED HE COULDN’T WALK, 


and Urinary 


Troubles were Followed by Dropsy -=--- A 


sluggish 


1 


Perfect Cure by Dr. Ghase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. 


536 Adelaide street, London, Ont., is anoth- 
Liver Vills are effective in the most severe and complicated diseases of the 


famous prescription has on,both the kidneys and liver is in a large meas- 
turative powers, When there are backache, frequent, diffeult or painful uri 
usness, constipation or stomach derangements, you may depend upon it that 


Chase’s Widney-Liver Pills prove themselves prompt to give relief and certain 
» to prove this fact is simply overwhelming 
‘Two years ago T was laid up with Kidney disease and urinary troub'es 
» caused by these troubles T becaise dhcp sical, and my lees would swell up 
ind at ail Hearing of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills” I procured a box and 
le medicine until now T can say for a cer 


unty that T am entirely cured, 1 


did me Ss» teuch good, and am firmly convinced that if it had not been for this 
to-day " 


and knewn worth, Dr. Chase's Kida 
»>kidnevs and liver, regulate the bowels 
Onepill a dose, 25 cents a box, At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, 


Liver Tills have never been ap 


and ensure the perfeet action of ihe 


DIAMOND BACK TERRAPIN, 


Formerly Deapised, They Are Now 
Considered a Delleacy. 
Half a century or so ago diamond 
back terrapin were fed to slaves and 
he Today they are the rarest deli- 
eucy known to the epicuriun world, 
says the Philadelphia North American, 
Then they sold for $1 a barrel, and 
laborers, when hiring out, specitied 
that they must not be eompelled to eat 
terrapin more than twice a week, To- 
| day a barrel is cheap at $800, and mil- 
} onalres tracel hundreds of miles for 

a chance to feast on this most dell- 
| clous of all meats, 

Of course this means genuine dia 
mond backs, There are many imita- 
tions 

Every first class restaurant In the 

| countey features “terrapin a la Mary- 


land” on its menu, but In not one case | 


out of a hundred is the real terrapin 
served. The diner regales himself on 
what he belleves to be Maryland's 
choicest dish. Instend he is merely 


eating fresh water turtles, “sliders” or | 


th Carolina goldens.’ 
lhe reason is simple, Restaurateurs 
don't serve real diamond backs be- 
cause they can't get them, The world's 
total terrapin population does not ¢x 
d 25,000 of legal size, and these are 
contined to the shores of the Chosna- 
peake bay, the only place that produces 
them 

Baltimore, Philadelphia and New 
York enjoy a monopoly, These three 
cities get practically the entire output 
but few ever find thelr way across the 
Blue Ridge. The epleure unfortunate 
enough to be born in Chieago or St, 
Louls must either come east or forego 
the joys of terrapin 

To select ar diamond back ama- 
ild be guided by these distin- 
guishis ind characteristic markings 

It is of a greenish, dark olive color, 
sometimes running to spotted gray, 
yellow on the plate which surrounds 
the shell and has concentric dark 
stripes along the plate on both shells 
head are a dirty white, 
sprinkled with small black spots, The 
bottom shell ls of whitish yellow 

The males are much larger than the 
fi iles and have the concentric streaks 
tter detined The female has 
the more delicate flesh, The male can 
stinguished by his toe nails, whieh 
much longer than those of the fe 


teurs & 


The sides of the 


Hail and Bombs, 

The plan of destroying hall clouds by 
exploding bombs among them was sug 
gested nearly 100 years ago by Pro- 
fessor Parrot of Riga 


Hiccough, 
For this affection, which Js so often 


ovok y obstinate, close the ears 
with the tips of the fingers, exert a 
certain pressure therewith, and at the 


saimie time drink In small drafts any 


sort of a liquid offered by another per- | 
son, and the hiccough will cease In- 
} stantaneously, 


! 
We are fellow laborers with a ¢ 


jinon end--reverent to the lowest 
jits possibilities emulous to. tl 
jhighest for its sublime perfectior 

| Alexander Wilder, MoD 


THE SYSTE 
CLEANSE SprecTuALLY. 


YaReOMES | STIPATION 
ABITUAL PERMANENTL 
40 SE> 


ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS, 


BUY THE GENUINE —MANT'D BY 


QUISRNIAFIG MYRUP ic 


pri sViee, pe aN gory 
ror « res al net ists emer 50. PER ROTTLE 
er — 


Se Se er 


Ile who there 
A . a | | 
Mivard’s Liniment Cures Ch lis, Eto, 


Dr. J. D we'd Dysen'ery Cordial 
ane iy cure vor dysentery, ¢ 
summer compla nt, sea sickne 
incidental to children teething 
diate relief to those suffer ng 
of indiscretion in eating unripe { 
bers, ete, It acts with wonderful ra 
never fails to conquer the disease, > 
fear cholera if they have a bottle 
cine convenient, 


} If things fail to come 


THEHERALD(Raw winos) MARKETS. 


——— —_—— AD —_— “AT ing the 0 
PONOKA, ALBERTA, | WHEAT—During the past week it 


ne WET WEATHER has seemed an unusually difficult | 


thing for traders to make up theit 


An Education 


IN ITSELF, THAT IS WHAT CAN BE 
JUSTLY CLAIMED FOR 


minds as the chances of the pre 


A LOOK AND A SMILE. cause the Colds that cause 


‘ Sent situation in the wheat trade 
Licence Pneumonia and Consump- Last week trade showed itself active | T 
An Incident Which Explained Mra, Gur s. 6 8 eee ee and markets buoyant, but in the in H E G LO BE 
MeKintey'’s Luck at Cribbage, terval between 1 riday and Monday 


TORONTO 
CANADA'S LEADING NEWSPAPER 


Its news-gathering facilities the industrial, social, commercial or political 
events of the world—are not excelled by any paperin America. If you are 
living west of North Bay you can have the early morning edition (includ. 
ing the big Saturday illustrated) for only #2,00 per annum, Take ad- 
vantase of this GREAT HALF-PRICE OFFER TO-DAY, 


When the late President Melint e ’ there was an increase of showers 
and party went west hot many months | | O Ss over Kansas ans adjoining territors 


before he was shot, Mrs. MelKinley and on Monday the speculative mar 


went too. While t: ge with Mr, Scott Consumption kets in the States felt the effects of 


one day, the man whose firm built the this strongly, and a drop of le to 
Oregon, Mrs. MelKinley said, “Oh, do 


rl ih took place A more contident 
you play cribbage, Mr. Seott?” ure fevling resulted Puesday, but 


on or 
“Yos," was the great shipbuilder’s | 


Wednesday another bad break took 


answer, cures the cold, heals the place, resulting in a drop of le to Address; THE GLOBE, Toronto 
“Well, so do 1.” sald Mrs, MeWinley. lungs and makes you well, Lye Since then some renewal of 

“L wish you would play a game witb | SHILOH cures Consumption COnndence 1s evidently DUE +n tha week 

me." |] god all Lung and Throat [/iy vompared with closing prices 


“T should be delighted to do so,” was Troubles; and Coughs and 
the reply. Coldsina day. Positively = [/imore favorable weather over a larg 


: - | ry 
Later, a8 President MeKinley and guaranteed. 25cents. . . area of the winter wheat in the 
Mr. Scott were looking over the latter's at side fe }States have imparted a somewhat 


big plant, Mrs. MeKinley not being Write to S.C. Wrtis & Co., Toronto, jimore encouraging feeling as to the 
present, the president said, “Ob, by 


Friday of last week. The rains and 


and have strength of about 800 pounce, If made of pieces gpliced at each horizontal, they 


| i ia bated me “ts for the crops over such would have ao strength of only about Lio pounds, We also x rr ental fe 8 

an. a free trial bottle, I | I ’ ut fe 3 ut bo ne also make gates, ornamental fences, 

the way, Mr. Scott. didn’t I hear you | __ Cat. for fre trial bottle, area, but we think the improvement poultry netting, nails and staples. The Pane Wirs Fonce Co., Limited, Walkervi'lo. Ort. € 
ond Mrs, McKinley arranging to play Karl's Clover Root Tea Cures Headache amounts rather to the saving of a ROSS & ROSS, General Agents, Box 633, Winniper. Man 


cribbaye some tim 

“Yes,” said Mr. Scott, “we are going 
to play.” 

“Well, what kind of a player are 
you?” asked the president. 

“Oh, pretty fair, | guess. I play a 
pretty good game.” 

“Well, so do 1,” sald Mr. McKinley. 


portion of what was promising to 
be alinost a lost crop had the adverse 


‘ It is better to marry a crying wo 
Weather been continued rather that 


iti estabisbing of “anething that {0 Chan 8 halespulling on HALCYON HOT SPRINGS, B. C. 


how turn out a fairly good 


A Common yield Monkey Brand Soap makes copper like 


Manitoba wheat bas been very | Bold, tin like silver, crockery like marble, Without question the best and 


Bred Cow quiet and demand extremely light and windows like crystal. %@ lost effective springs in Canada for 


On Saturday last tl Value of L nor. 


i ; i: t e cure eumatism ki ’ r 
“But do you know, i¢ may seem When toned un by thern in store Fort William, spot or Ile is happiest, be he king or peas He isa he AP ade bis Bae 
strange, but it is a fact, that T have Dick's Blood Purl |May delivery, was T5tyc, and 2 nore Jant, who finds his happiness at home ANU MXM to sh Ut GUL 
never been able to play well enough to | fier wil give as |thern = 73« On Wednesday these |—Geothe ties of the water are unequalled 
beat Mrs. MekKiuiey."” As he said this much and as rich prices were down to 74e 1 northern REED Splendid hotel accommodation ; fine 
he looked at ie Scott pe a aon acter he frbat Soh A and T2e 2 northern, and since then THE BLOOM OF HEALTH fishing and hunting An ideal spot 
pant smile. Their eyes met. was renaristocralic they have advanced again to 74%jc 1 _—_ fo e tr T 
enough. Mr. Scott understood, and It Jersey cowgives }northern and 72%\c¢ 2 northern, at [How to Keep Little Ones Bright LEONG AL 
was safe to say that be did not beat upon or. ; Which prices sales were made vester Active and Healthy 
Mis. McKinley. dinary }day, although for the most part sel eigenen ; 
: eed feed, and ; ; ‘ , ‘ 
; ape lers were holding for x 1 northern Every mother knows that little 
Roand the World by Mall, | be ate, land 78¢ 2 norther 1 hard is offer- |ehildren need careful attention--but | Tle is only advancing in life whose 
A postal card sent from Paris to Par Serene ed at 78e spot or May delivery in| they do not need strong drugs. When |p, 


given. art is getting softer, his blood 


fs vin Moseow, Vindivoestok and San | 
Freneisco made the trip around the 
world In eighty days at a cost of 2/ 
centa, 


store Fort William without finding [baby is peevish, cross or unwell warmer, his brain quicker, and his 


9 } buyers is an unfortunate fact that too many [epirit entering into living peace 
DICK S FLOUR-Hungarian Patent $2.05 p% mothers dose them with so-called | fohn Ruskin. ’ 


| gana St ORS HO UITGk: (Glenae ‘ soothing’ medicines which stupets oxen 
BLOOD PURIFIER Byte ota pounds; Glenora, $1.00; | put the little one into an un DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION |. occasion: 


70; Manitoba, $1.50; and 


slow ove e ant of action in the billary ducts 
ay SPR TP Pere Hel cX, $1.20 natural sleep, but do not remove the | ed bythe wan 0 A ' 
SO iecrcaieeuteatnenmasacies |: | cate ae cause of the trouble, What is wanted | ose of vitality tn the stomach 10, pecrete the 
° saves feed too, é J ) +19 $ ) rb 
asmaller amount of well digested GROUND FEED—Demand ts steady to make th? little ones, bright, cheer- | go ong also being the prinvipal suse of He d- 
Cc. C. Richards & Co epee : Ltd 


isfi and prices remain unchanged as fol e ! sts. |ache. Parmelee’s Vogetable Pills taken before 
food satisfies the demands of the J “g At gt \ nega ful and well is Baby's Own Tablet « 


Se . ve " ‘es | : oo - ving to bed, for a while, never fail to give re- ‘ 
Gontlemen,—I have used BIUNARD'S | system and every particle of nour- Jlows: Oat chop, per ton, $27.50; | which will promptly cure, colic, sour |fijfand effect a cure. Mr. W. F, Ashdown, Ash- 
LINIMENT on my vessel and in my | sishment sticks. jbarley chop $21.50; mixed barley |stomach, indigestion constipation, | down, Out. wees: Parmeloe's Pills aro Ga. 
family for years, and for every day | ri vt ‘ barley and oats, $24.50; oatmeal |diarrhoea, simple fevers and teeth ing (he load against ten other makes I have in 
Cs ; 50 cents a package, fs eth pu stuc. 
ills and accidents of life I consider i Miaicae Gand feed, $11.50; oil cake, $27 ing troubles hey give children 
“UE es 0. P ’ ’ 
it hos no equal Leeming, petal al gents, OATS—There is not very much [sound refreshing sleep, because they | Let a man overcome anger by love 
I would not start on a voyage . eevee ' : 1 : t datcnt w- [remove the cause of the trouble. |} , : sacaullat s sa fat 
without it, if it cost a dollar al Write for Book on Cattle and Ifs+res freg, Usiness Going im Outs Just at pres- 7° et him overcome evil by goo ‘ 
atts : : at ent, as the weather is not favorable | These tablets are guaranteed to cons [ping overcome the greedy by liberal- 
rottle 


am | for trattic A little demand has been [talon no opiate or other harmful 
experienced from the east, which has | drug Mrs. James Found, Valentia 


CAPT. F.R. DESJARDIN 


Schr Storke,’’ St Andre, Kamour- Times of general calamity and con- 


ashi Wuslon Have evar Wee BCCHUET VG G0 [etre ee tte moe Ter Uae | Gun haniete Hy Taly. was owey pale | MUNGth'S MARIMNCAL UUa UIs IGmpet, 


the greatest minds The purest ore | the % 


ity, the liar by truth. —Buddha 


same figure as we quoted a week [and delicate and so peevish that 1 
is produced from the hottest fur- 


ago vocal dealers are also paying |had to walk the floor with him day Of all the advantages which come 
pa gee nace, and the brightest thunder-bolt }the same prices as a week ago for [and night. The first tablet 1 gave [to any young man, I believe it to be 
It is certain that either wise bear-] jis elicited from the darkest storm their supplies We quote No. L {him helped him, and that night he demonstrably true that poverty is 
ing or ignorant carriage is caught, [Colton white, in carlots on track, Winnipeg, [Slept soundly Since then the tab-]the greatest.—J. G. Holland 
as men take diseases one of another —_ per bushel, 42 to 44ce; No. 2 white lets have made him perfectly well 


therefore, let them take heed of the and he is now a fine, healthy look 


140 to dle; feed oats, ST to BSc; seed 
company Shakespeare ‘GRAVEL CURED oats 15 to 50 At country points | ing baby and is getting quite fat 


OR. A. W. CHASE'S 
CATARRH CURE... 25c. 


farmers are getting 2S to BOc for 1] would not be without the tablets 


There never was, and never will be, a| A ; mie te nro lif they cost a dollar a box fg sent direct to the diseased 
aniversal panacea, in one remedy, for all ius | No. = White oats. 3 et oats a Babs Own craulota cate woods to} pats by the Improved Blower, 
to which flesh is he'r—the very nature of | REMARKABLE ASE OF THIS | BOS Onerine ' ild ! : ill ' it taken a en phony benny a 

pe : { non f 4 " 4 children of all ages and are taken as ssag 8 dre 
many curatives being euch that wero the PAINFUL DISEASE BARLEY —Reeceipts are very light : s throat and ermebant cures 
germs of other and ditferently seated dis-| - oS e readily as candy Crushed to a Gatarsh aad Hae Packer Minwas 
cases routed in the system of the patient—| | ; Ais and the market holds firm at 40 to | yo wder they can be given with ab free, All dealers, or Dr. A. W, Chase 
what would relie,2 one ili in turn would ag- | Reuben Drape of Bristo Que, }42e for malting grades, and 88 tol corte safety to the youngest, weak Medicine Co.,, Toronto and Builalo, 
gravate the other. We have, however, in| Who Was a Vietim, Finds Relief |40¢ for feed at hale MOlaE hi allCORmeiniE Ol a ea ae 
Quinine Wine, when obtainable in a sound nd a Permanent Cure—He Tells | ni AB, : se Th Seeho rin cauhia ARE rT 
unadulterated state, a reme ey for many anc | of His Snuff ngs, and How Lie FLANSEED—Dealers are asking ent postpaid at 25 cents a box » i , ‘ : ' : ag ae 
geievous ills. By its graaaal and judicious | Pataitiacirauniaenanind }$2.00 per bushel for seed flax addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine [aids in deeds when deeds are neces 
use the frailest systems are led into conva- ay = Scale ecdinag oh pak : Co., Brockville, Ont sary, is the true friend —Plautus 
lescence and strength by the influence which | —_— HAY—Reevipts geht, and the 
Quinine exerts on nature’s own restoratives, Bristol, Qu May 17 Special mnarket ois St his $8 to SY per = ; Mvarvacdlitwe cehich siaehldanaiets 
It relieves the drooping spirits of those with) \.) 4 “) can Cause more severe | tor wr fresh Loose hay is A man who lives entirely for him aay ; as 9 a : 
; . ait returns with seven f sh duties 
whom achronic state of morbid despond+) jy gc ciry) pain than gravel. Reu-|not offering to nt sel! becomes at last obnoxious to fe Ranh oe Aes 
ency and lack of interest in life is a disease, ion th : Abgis evan | himselt. ‘there ip no -wearine like ti vine Charles Kingsle 
and, by tranquilizing the nerves, disposes to | '' per, OF Us place, was taken POULTRY—There is very little lina woartnose of n man who eas’ —_—_—_—_—_— 
sound and refreshing sleep—imparts vigor with this awful trouble about tive | poultry in the marke Chickens are lof | , Atha + retin No man admires a doctor's gener 
to the action of the blood, which, being} \. ago. He was cured and so > 2 SS itvauhalelll ted) OF Nima ans ut . Heh | Osity prescribing large do 
stimulated, courses throughout ie veins, | iyi) have asked him how it was | , ' Bieta Mad ; Nemises which follow the selfish pus 
strengthening the healthy animal functiong| yoo) tit he has decided to wive the ec, ACCOPA |ife —Reyv, J, WH. Jowett 
of the system, thereby making activity a} rs . + ‘ oe " serehyy 4 fa ee: h $100 Reward $100. 
necessary resut, atrengthe ning the rare aK ( or publy - BUTTER-Creamet ARTEL In ie .* ee 
und giving life to the ¢ ative organs, which bout tive wears ago was taken , Phas u : 6 readers of this paper will be pleased to 
naturally demand inc ased substance—re with the Grave I suffered great |COuntrS ss commenced opera WILL CURE pare “4 4 gat A at let : nite ‘ arene 
sult, improved appetite, Northrop & Lyman,|),.),,) 6 - sent for a docto He | tier | t so far have ship : ces See may Chae PEPTYC Cet ae 
of ‘Toronto have given to the public their) | ne mic nd came to] Ped no The weather is not = difficulty of | Pr is the only positive cure now known to the 
superior Quinine Wine at the usual rate, and, | > ? Pisa a sity ' fa \ ture or trate con- breathing, | medical fraternity, Catarrh being a constitu 
gauged by the opinion of eclontlets, thig) See te ys afterwarde, but my dis quently wath ne 1 tightness of | tional dl ease, requires a constitutlonal treat 
vine roaches nearest perfection of anyin)/ ease was not gone, and in a short |™* one ADEE ¢ - . ment, all's Catarch Cur sken internally, 
yt} Ahh sn All Arny (Past it. rf erat ay ; * ttnek, | slow ntil it the chest, wasting away of flesh, GEORG | ey et mcne te thie aca maneane rit 

_ sable, seh sd lahat oe : ; : ; : Co an \ troubles, consumption, coughs, catarrhy| faces of the system, thereby destroying the 

3 orl ics ds ae bi | ' Ahotner Go to BBe 4 ' Pa} | colds, pneumonia and pleurisy. : sour aatlon oF} iin bate SIvIDE She pation) 

ra r ; ahd res ee Een butter tul rol ASANPLE FREE BY MAIL to every sufferer ieee ture in doliut its Work. The propries 
t ’ t i Ralph |, 1 wa wett weake i tho.) ees ‘ “eye NALA PuL-Mo is for sale by all druggists @C) tors have so much faith in its curative rs 
\ I t grades range GOWN tO LOC TOU TOMS | @ er large bottle, and 15 cents for] that they offer one hundred dollars for any case 

— ae | lhe t try | t pli i ve fire ney : Sinn ’ thatittails tocure, Send for t of testimon 
P ' - roe floraet in Coure . , , ah ad me t | small bottle, or direct from tal 
Minard’s LI ment Cures ( rget 1 UCWS, Prodd’s: Wide Pil he vid they | BUTTER-D Reeeipts of da THE PUL-MO CO,, TORONTO, ONT. Adress, ’ J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O 
TT oe \ red | othe I thought PE} putter are t ht. Oldest trad Sold by ts, Te 
I to the | pines would t the i bought a box. |, here » the ‘ t ver her iLL WOOL MICA ROOFING Hall s Family Pills are the be 
’ ‘ i th obs tt Just one week after IT began the 4 rket be ht o och LLL | Anh edtannay) . Ata do with 
ought to be directs | t tment DT passed tone as large) As high Zoe could be obtained ot Reputation for durabi-ity established, EB + wit a 
I J It as a sinall beang d r days late co or ! rest ide | years tri Our severe frost has no of. st on it 
— —_—_——_ | 1 her about th of a gral ) | oof /merican paper telting which eracka 
} hada lated enor Putte waour climate, 
OU‘ OF BORTS.<Symptome, Hondas erand) yy fe Ee CqW Ww. G. FONSECA. 
, otite, furred tongue, and ¢ , ;G8—Supplic ‘ \ | ; 
Postulon, Those symptoms, If neglect It cha a ; t to 10¢ p 18 Higuins ave POR ee | BULE AG) HOUSEHOLD HINTS. 
} cute diseas itisa trite saying ‘ t } : , Daal \Gh UM 
mor tion is worth a pound i : lk ( ( ‘ da. pad . ' he best towe 
oune I tention at this point m os | t om : — - i makes the best towels 
f ind large de o's Dill bir t have 1 ! hat]? 
ko from two to three Nv» | t it CATTLE A L fae er no soap should be 
solng to bed or ‘ 
aighte 4 suse re bottle nd anyone can see] bee hipped east t tt Aus | ' | upt to give it a pewtery ap 
j thea who wisl Dodd In icine l lent OX] t dea 1 Tdutehe are Prankliit | 
epee tacoma | certah domy life }tinding cattle ve carce and hard —_—-—- ling of the week should be 
! ‘ ‘ t p nt "i tor ( M Drap will belto obt For choice beet aniinais Where the ciate t the l I done and never 
| mud oa tion | wood new ti ! sufferar wholth ‘ w op i | ha ay conquer the wreat Sophock 
t iD ih yng not } e know! that Dodd's | pe peo 1 off cars here Phe a ae ! 
rid.=-hinet ik Pil e Gravel and |range ¢ wie rom mH A 
: Scania ae asintchact iy good demand for stocker j | ent for 
| the ] . rh rstocks 1One ounce of Sunlight aa. 
xeell nt Reasons exist why Dr, Thomas’ | What has cured t thenan and |and the westward moveme of these ba ‘ A ennton { ' , 
Oll should AeH by personel hundred of other very bad cases }is now quite | ngs arelSoap is worth more than | when sweeping matting t 
vith affections o w roa or t s } ‘ ‘ thet tting 
. ya hould cure at ne nd those who | wort! i high ¢ \ se -y and saves t 1) i ; 
' upon She tkln. Theumabic Prine | hy fMicter Mr, Draper was|point of shipment lwo year olds |{Wo ounces of common soap. Cushion pil filled with silk floss, It 
that it is speedy, pure and unob-| should t Dor Kidney Pill ure | ging from $20 to $22 ia said, ret the hape hd elastionty 
whether taken internally or ap en HWOGS—Hogs are it very light etter t! th fi 1 with cheap fveath- 
twardly, ‘ , n ers or 80 cn | 
piled out Res ip ciewn ohne? Whe 1 man get p in the world] suppl and hold firm at 6%4c oe Shah Spapueri2 a er eS ER wr irae 
saan % att a ja good reputation often come iN} pound for best packing weights, off AAT Tae i ahet r of the wall, 
t ittempts what pHandy as a parachut cars here and the center of the pieture should not 
‘ i 1 
_—————— a ws e fc = 0 ch above the ¢ line 
' tre th, pleads no execu | : a , MILCH COW Cow ar very REDUCES be much 
it th s U ) ’ ers eadily ‘ringing out a eloth hot water and 
possil , t hink ; all Minard’s Liniment Cures Distemper, scares As d good ke ee x e ye " rt HS Fea, , Reearniits 
uN for itsel all wing $845 each it iis marke a iping the furr ( it eto } 
law af ’ bring , fering re poor EXPENSE ting on the furniture cream will result in 
M ( A man’s reach should exceed his} most of the stock ¢ Yerings a ] ing w 
ve ) the range be a very high polish that will not Onger 
grasp, or what's a heaven for they Ask for the Octagon Bar eos | mark. 
| Robert Browning ing it 


| 
» role ole ole obs ote ols ate So ete nto ots afee! e! to ote ele ote ofe nfo “ed ote ofe efe efe ots ote « 40 sabe ofe os of ots of ofe of pate efe ofe o> os afte ste of | 
ots 


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Taken Up. 


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AAABAAA FEADLAODE HOME AEOAEOD AEAOAAADA Hn “ 
¢ 


+ pa. al = . ballad Ne 
> = 2 b PVUEP FOP TET EY TUSSI OL FVOES PITEVOT TD TOVFFEY §- 
» coo => = *% 3 © 38 Hin od 
< —| <_—s ; & ry ¢ dake S| . Came tomy plice utJune d, 1 ’ < NEY nf > a Pans “~reoys 6 
h A « a = “3 @) red roan os Ciyvilse, WW 33 C 1AS A > 33 
SS en | w~ & 7 = * 6 + ° @ + 
= as m cn w oe lew mil wl face, branded ¢ » 2 © 
wit a & oe 7) + ¢ ° % & 
©) ~~” . 4 ated = vom onryht 1 » > 
5 #) 3! Build : 
ton — - : as F of ° SOW Al avait an ul er and ~ + 
Z, “2 | ak , & = {+ = % 
<= na ; 5 8 gn 1") Southenst | t > % > 
(@) “a ~ A | D> oo 3% U d t k + 3 
se) St on | bh EN ‘> Taken Uy 3 § PICTURES nN er a er, FURNITURE® & 
by = O§& i 2 @ @ z ¢@ pFRAMED., REPAIRED..¢ @ 
an} = | 5 ‘o ie oa ( | mare with whi { ‘ D 4 ESTIMATES ON BUILDINGS AND ALL KINDS OF y > 
oo — nS v 2 9 bciiy 70 ‘ > CARPENTER WORK CHEERFULLY GIVEN. of 
on Tee | t ‘ | > . ARPENTER WORK IL ERFPULLY IVI « « * 
mo) «me Re hoa: 2a) | : 2% 
2) ; be og Hy no brane % - se 2 
ie) = ‘eo § 3 5 © One black mare, weight about 1 $* PONOKA, ALBERTA. ¢ # 
\ “2 i 2 \ j BLABAAE EAS AAEOE BODES AAAOAEA DOADAEAES BOAEE > 
= em ne uote * : 


Ow. er oon have the same hy en 


se vr7r77 nk db oh dd nA dE bh ht Ade a Ah A cy beat Aatatadnd VvrVTTCV" bik Js 
ib othe Ou iyvery Aber, (CPOnOk sho ee ee ~— 
SHROKO KOKO KOKO HKOKOKOKOKOKOKOKO KOKO KH OHOKOKOKOHOKO $ 


SB [iientityingg horses aud prying a SUMAN NAY 15 
o) “% 
_ = we n u 3 ine 7 a2 5 
Ne. 3 Sy ecw coke | alt pee “ 
JOBBERS and TRADERS } nm te aay : 
Seer § » City Live ry Feed & | 

; i Write us f oura tations on o 1 will se uo pub ction a \ oy e nwa ri : 
Metal Siding and Shingles, Corrugated Tron & wes, Aha est of Ponoka on 3 wai Wa ee Sf é ble. —2 $ 
Metal Ceilings, Portland Cement, Anchor 4 PUBSDAY, JULY 8, ii, ww? BJ . tm i 
and Victoria Tarand Building Pa- g my personal property, ineludiny $e  @554 Toan at ARTE ye ode Wnatantine ae 
per, Jute Sacks, Scales b head of her Bateers y g : 3 
Hamilton ae CS j a eri 
° Q a - | “ ' a 
Ellis & Grogan. po % 
w oe is 
Wholesale Agents. Calgary. © sy Propret 5 
OLOKOHOKEHOROKOROKOROKOHONOADHOROA OLOHOAOHOHOHO © i . %/7 Bt MAINAIA RON AAA ARE AAW ATTAIN RAGE VR RAT AR 

et eet a ae , Li we “3 LIN ER Vr. EL LAD AbAbDAAhbAAAhAAAAD DADA ADAAAAAAAAARA RA ALL 

. 


CLINTON @. REE 


ir tv I have in stock a full a) ” fix, REST i 1 (eae 
I 2 Vy Ma ¢ "8 line of Seasonable = hc Hoa tt Bt ark A) 
The eal state \\ wes 1. i Millinery wich i am RS CA ARR ” ? 


oooee 

S 
OQ 
ce 

& 


> 


3 mn selling at Popular 
} 3; NOTARY PUBLIC. iz D rig OH eile 


rices......-. 


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m)| YOUR INSPECTION INVITED, 
CONVEYANCING, INSURANCI ALL FORMS OF LEGAT, ik Highest Varket Pri 
3 DR Pi MISS LIZZIE FUYNN, GRA HAY @Crmmrm meron: 
DOCUMENTS DRAWN.., ts : .£.D GRAIN. 
Will make Sale a PSS 


Dates for two of the best Auctio 


PHESHOHSEOOS OHO HO 


anna enema ns tome 


© £0605O40d O64 96 0900 


» SOPOPEOOOOO OE DL OL OOK OOOSSD 


REDUCED PRICES... ae 
IN LAUNDRY. |{ TTOUS© ao 


feud? pany be rr bi co NY a 
% ww IRS th, tt - fow Ss & Dic S. 


2 ze le ‘par pale, : 
Anenttor.’ McCormick Machinery. 


eM MRS. A. SHARY Ww 4 £ 
Shirt Collar wl 5 v Mini eapoli SS Th reshers ‘3 
Call Handkerchief? § 
Btock ings ib K nily w ab " A Czér of 2-point Barb Wire. i 
Lad vt h Ladies’ Wa 1b rie ik 
. GURNEY’S STOVES. 3% 
eo SAM Ad bed eje oj 1 : TONER Y FEV OMT PRP iS